Monday, 31 December 2012

New Economic Order: David Korten


Is David Korten a pioneer of a new economic order? He was born in Longview, Washington in 1937 and was awarded an MBA and PhD from the Stanford University Graduate School of Business. He has taught on the Harvard Business School’s MBA and doctoral programmes. But he is far more exceptional than his brilliant academic career might indicate.

With David’s academic background and business know-how, conventional wisdom might have thought it likely that he would be a leader of some kind: perhaps a man destined to improve the business performance of America. Conventional wisdom was indeed correct on this point - but it is very unlikely it would have foreseen the nature of the improvements that David would want to make:

“Wall Street generates money in astonishing quantities through accounting tricks, financial bubbles, and debt pyramids without producing anything of real value.”
                                                From Capitalism and the Common Good, David Korten, 2012.

If Wall Street (and other financial markets) do not produce anything of real value than the legitimacy of the whole financial sector is challenged. This would indeed herald a new economic order. But where do David’s ideas come from? Are they sound?
It could be argued that David’s early, post-Stanford career from 1959 was unduly influential upon his young and passionate mind. He devoted himself to setting up business schools in low-income countries such as Ethiopia. In the developing world, David would certainly have seen the struggles, hardships and pain that might have aroused his sympathy and turned him against the securities and comforts of the American establishment. But he chose this career with the poor overseas – something within him had already turned before he even left the USA.
There is no suggestion here that David was in any way a latent Marxist; though he would have witnessed the McCarthy communist accusations in the USA, that Second Red Scare of the early 1950’s. After all, David was a business-studies student throughout that period.
But whatever resource, insight, compassion, understanding or humanity the younger David possessed that set him upon his life’s path, his later career consolidated his views. For 15 years from the late 1970s, David lived in South-east Asia and served as a Ford Foundation project specialist then as an Asia regional advisor to the United States Agency for International Development (USAID). He came to understand the root causes of development failure in South-east Asia. He began to see that the economic policies of the developed world including the USA and the UK were themselves the cause of global environmental and social crises.
Perhaps David gets his ideas by experiencing life on the outside, as it were, of the existing economic order. He got to know the downside of existing economics but unlike the millions who suffer in silence, David had the knowledge and skills to seek a solution.
Wherever his ideas came from, David is now famous for promoting a new kind of economic order. In Capitalism and the Common Good 2011, a speech David gave at the University of Oregon, he identified two kinds of economy, the existing and the emerging as follows:

The Existing Economy
“The greed-driven, money-serving, corporate-ruled Wall Street Economy measures its success exclusively by the financial profits it generates for the already rich. It neither acknowledges nor accepts responsibility for the economic, social, environmental, and political devastation it leaves in its wake.”

The Emerging Economy
“The democratic, community-rooted, market-based, life-serving Main Street economies that ordinary people are rebuilding across the nation and around the world measure success by their contribution to securing adequate and meaningful livelihoods for everyone in a balanced relationship to nature.”

David’s Emerging Economy is based on common sense, business and economic knowledge, and wide experience. But is there necessarily something else that David possesses? After all, how many business leaders in the Existing Economy posses these self-same qualities and they do not recognise the need for fundamental economic change?

What is that something else that enables David to see a world that his fellows simple cannot see? After all, it is that something else which means that David can see a new kind of economic order emerging whilst others think he is, at the best, deluded.
Does that something else have to do with epistemes, the possibilities of knowledge? An episteme change would certainly explain why David can see a wholly different world from many of his contemporaries. It is in the nature of episteme change that those with old knowledge possibilities cannot deal with, cannot see and appreciate, the new (Foucault 1970).

Perhaps we are led to conclude that David Korten’s view of economics is a consequence of his open-mindedness: his innate ability to see changes for what they are, as they take place. If this is the case then he is liberated: he deals with fresh facts untrammelled by the economics of dogma.   

David Korten

References
Korten, D. (2011). Capitalism and the Common Good. USA: Living Economies Forum. Available at <http://livingeconomiesforum.org/From-Main-Street-to-Wall-Street> [Accessed December 2012].
Foucault, M. (1970). The Order of Things: An Archaeology of the Human Sciences. London: Routledge.

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