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When Corporations Rule the World

When Corporations Rule the World

Our Choice: Democracy or Corporate Rule

A handful of corporations and financial institutions command an ever-greater concentration of economic and political power in an assault against markets, democracy, and life. It’s a “suicide economy,” says David Korten, that destroys the very foundations of its own existence.

The bestselling 1995 edition of When Corporations Rule the World helped launch a global resistance against corporate domination. In this twentieth-anniversary edition, Korten shares insights from his personal experience as a participant in the growing movement for a New Economy. A new introduction documents the further concentration of wealth and corporate power since 1995 and explores why our institutions resolutely resist even modest reform. A new conclusion chapter outlines high-leverage opportunities for breakthrough change.

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Customer Reviews
For this book, we included the reviews of the previous edition due to the greater feedback provided.
 

Customer Reviews 

12 of 12 people found the following review helpful 5.0 out of 5 stars
Truly a masterpiece, July 7, 2015 By  JoshuaSee all my reviews
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Probably one of the most important books of our time. Truly a masterpiece. While the title fits the theme, this book covers a lot of ground equally maneuvering between fields of economics, social, justice, and more. New chapters are fantastic and frame the book in and even more relevant context. Few people in the world have the scope of knowledge to both understand and challenge global economic development and assess the of role of governments and civilians in this process. Dr. Korten is without question at the forefront of modern progressive theories and solutions to addressing an global economic model far out of balance with Earth and all living beings on it.
 
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful 5.0 out of 5 stars
Good stuff, March 20, 2016 By  DanielSee all my reviews
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A bit ranty perhaps, but has some great material that will get you thinking about the state of our world.

 
2 of 2 people found the following review helpful 5.0 out of 5 stars
Five Stars, January 12, 2016 By  Guillaume de la RocqueSee all my reviews
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Brilliant book  

 

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Customer Reviews 

123 of 130 people found the following review helpful 5.0 out of 5 stars
Thank you David Korten, September 10, 1998 By  This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. (Toronto Canada) – See all my reviews
No book or university course has provided me such a concise description with compelling examples, measures and details of the workings and history of the global economy.
The title could have been simply "Corporations Rule the World".
First and foremost, the book provides a foundation for thinking about sustainable business, ones’ role in society, day-to-day habits and our collective need to create a future for our children.
Take note, however, that the book is worth a read in a very pragmatic and personal way, as a primer for investors.
I was given the book on Aug 17 ’98 and finished it by the 22nd. In recent years, I had placed all of my hard earned cash, and some inheritence from hardworking grandparents — for convenience sake — in the hands of fund managers dealing in "blue chip" companies in the global equity markets. Understanding something from Kortens’ book, and his apt description of the world now around us…I sold all of those equities and funds on the 24’th. The markets collapsed on the 25’th. I’ll go back to directing my own investments with the cash I’ve saved — thanks to a timely reading of Korten’s informative book.
Kortens’ work is as brilliant as a Hitchcock movie — providing space for the reader to fill in the "gaps", to "get" his global picture in a personal way. Korten avoids confronting readers with the simple statement that WE ARE corporations. We ARE government and we ARE civil society — however healthy or sick…
Having said that, Korten’s book is entertaining and frightening because he is fact-based and truthful.
Unlike other Amazon.com book reviewers, I generally accept and enjoy pondering Korten’s ideas.
I volunteer and commit to spend my rare time on this planet to forward Korten’s kind of agenda for people-centered development. There’s no point having kids and no way to sleep at night, without wisdom and change.
I’ll invest in new forms of global business opportunity, based on Korten’s wisdom and call for change. I’ll start by changing myself, to make my actions consistent with my words, to make my words consistent with such wisdom as Korten’s and to make my business work towards a healthy tomorrow.
Thank you, David Korten.
 
85 of 90 people found the following review helpful 4.0 out of 5 stars
It’s not When, they do. Good overview of the concerns., April 28, 2003 By  J. Grattan (Lawrenceville, GA USA) – See all my reviews
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The fact that transnational corporations and their agendas have come to dominate cultural, political, and economic life on a global scale can hardly be disputed. These powerful corporations have used national governments and government-created international bodies to create a legislative and institutional regime that accedes to and actively promotes and implements a “free-market” ideology. This book is largely concerned with detailing the tremendous costs to the political, economic, and social fabric of the entire global community as corporations have become ever more capable under this ideological regime in extracting wealth and generating huge profits on a worldwide basis. The author sees poverty, social and political disintegration, and environmental degradation as the main consequences of this global corporate ascendance. The ability of corporations to penetrate the political and cultural sectors of our society is hardly a late twentieth century phenomenon. Despite the founders’ efforts to contain corporations by explicit and revocable state charters, emerging industrialists in the post-Civil War era became powerful enough to sway legislators and the judiciary to act in their behalf. Not only did corporations generally gain rights to perpetuity, but the Supreme Court declared corporations to be legal persons entitled to the same rights as ordinary citizens, in addition to limited liability. By the late 1920s capitalism had largely emerged triumphant over worker and community interests. Consumerism was instilled as the only legitimate avenue for realizing individualized “freedom.” According to the author, a form of democratic pluralism existed among the civil, governmental, and market sectors of society in the post-WWII era, but any such sectorial accommodation was mostly an aberration that came about only because of the necessity to solve the twin crises of the Great Depression (caused by corporate-led economic excess) and WWII. Any social accord that may have existed was shredded as corporations, backed by the Reagan administration, renewed their assault on the working class and relentlessly pursued self-interested global strategies. Over the last two decades, middle-class jobs have been lost, median pay has stagnated, and austerity has been imposed on the less fortunate as a profound upward redistribution of wealth and income has occurred. Globally, the structural adjustment measures forced upon developing nations by the World Bank and the IMF to qualify for loans, ripped the fabric of those societies and have actually increased indebtedness to First World bankers. Trade agreements and administrative bodies, such as the NAFTA and the WTO, are designed to eliminate local restrictions on investments by international firms and barriers to the free movement of goods between nations. The freedom for capital to move freely among nations has also fueled rampant financial speculation unrelated to productive investment. Unconscionably, American taxpayers have been forced to bailout those engaged in extracting wealth from the developing world. Free market ideology is used to justify the gutting of the social and legal structures of nations. But it is a disingenuous view. Free market activities posited by Adam Smith involve local, individual economic actors, none of whom have the power to control the marketplace. Unregulated market activities by huge economic entities can result in market coercion. For example, monopolistic firms can externalize costs, that is, they are powerful enough to force societies to pay for the social and environmental side-effects of their activities. For example, labor and environmental regulations are often ignored with impunity with society picking up the pieces. The impact of corporations acting as legal persons cannot be overemphasized. Corporations overwhelm actual citizen political participation and free speech by the extent and intensity of their political lobbying and media controlling efforts. Corporations and the rich, in a form of legalized bribery, basically fund political campaigns. They also heavily sway public opinion through public relations front organizations, conservative think-tanks, and the control of the major media. The dependency of the media on advertising dollars virtually guarantees presentation of views that are compatible with corporate interests, not to mention the fact that the huge media empires are themselves transnational corporations with no interest in harming broader corporate interests. As the author indicates, corporations have largely "colonized" the common culture. Television is the main media outlet for the inculcation of business-friendly values, which emphasizes the avid pursuit of consumption. Even political activity has become mostly the marketing of pleasing candidates. The message is incessantly and subtly delivered that a free market system is self running and stabilizing and needs little or no political interference. Of course, the reality is far different. Corporations have infiltrated government at all levels with the sole purpose of ensuring that governments take an active role in supporting the corporate agenda, or pro-business regulation. In addition, governments are left to deal with the unprofitable aspects of society or side-effects of corporate actions. The net effect is a democracy hardly worthy of the name.

The author's principal approach to this regime of corporate hegemony is to call for a rollback to self-sustaining local communities. Such recommended measures as land reform (breaking up corporate farms) and urban agriculture seem almost quaint. The author confuses his message of a return to pre-consumption-dominated life by calling for high tech solutions, such as video-phones, to link local communities. Where does he think high tech products come from other than corporate development labs? A hard-hitting analysis seems to be getting waylaid by some fuzzy spirituality. But the most practical approach is contained in the book. Free market propaganda has to be countered and a regime of regulating big business through governmental controls must be instituted. Is there any hope for this? The Seattle protest and other citizen demonstrations show that the democracy-killing initiatives of the WTO have not gone unnoticed. In addition, it has been claimed that 25 percent of the population belongs to a cultural grouping called "Cultural Creatives," who can be expected to oppose insensitive corporate agendas. And the author takes no note of minority interests that are generally opposed to the conservative business agenda. The author wants to see a cultural transformation, but a heightened awareness of class will be needed to combat the class warfare being perpetrated on the non-elites of the world.

 
32 of 33 people found the following review helpful 4.0 out of 5 stars
A well-stated thesis backed by research and logic, May 1, 2006 By  Brave Sir Robin (Seattle, WA USA) – See all my reviews
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Just finished it tonight, and am overall impressed with all but the last section of the book. I came into this wanting to know why American democracy seems to be decaying at the behest of corporate greed and voter apathy, and feel this tome addresses these issues in a very well documented and reasoned way. I think it helps to state some of the various Green/economic issues that are behind the anti-globalization movements, and gives the movement a much more credible footing to use.

Oddly enough, I don’t think anyone needs to be convinced that what major, multi-national corporations are doing to people and the planet are not good for the long-term viability of either. Still, Korten classifies the wrongdoings and gives them context, in a very methodical way. Sometimes it seems to drag, but that’s because the problem is big and has many aspects to see before you can fully appreciate its scope.

The only place I had trouble was at the end, where the author suggests solutions to current corporate economic dominiation. The suggestion of a greater role of local economics and action makes sense to me, and probably to others. It’s when he starts suggesting a life “driven not by the love of money, but by a love of life” that I start to groan. Such imprecise feel-good prescriptions (though well intended) don’t really get us closer to corrective actions. To his credit, there are more concrete suggestions that we can follow (recycle/reuse, buy organic, etc), but they could be stated more coherently.

Still, this is a good primer for understanding the workings of both corporations and the IMF/World Bank in the global economy. Definitely worth the read.

 
 
Last modified on Thursday, 22 September 2016 23:33
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