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by William Christensen
Introduction: Dreams Becoming Realities
In 1998 and again in 1999, Dr. Norman Kurland, President
of the Center for Economic and Social Justice (CESJ) of Washington
D.C., USA, visited Bangladesh; each visit was for 2-3 weeks.
He presented new, exciting ideas on how to take advantage
of situations of poverty for the universal good of a people.
He spoke about ways to turn prisoners into productive members
of society who could build their futures while completing
their imprisonment terms. Big cities, overwhelmed with garbage
and other wastes, could turn these burdensome realities into
profitable sources of energy, valuable economic resources.
He proclaimed that least-developed countries (LDCs) such as
Bangladesh could leapfrog conditions of inherited, deep-rooted
poverty and become economic leaders of the 21st century world.
At first, Dr. Kurlands presentations seemed more like
dreams than practical possibilities. However, he met and discussed
with the economic leaders of Bangladesh including Muhiuddin
Khan Alamgir, Wahiduddin Mahmud, Rehman Sobhan, Mohammed Yunus,
Muzaffar Ahmed and many others including labor leaders, government,
banking, donor, media, university and NGO personnel. In June
1999, Dr. Kurland sent complimentary copies of a new publication
to 16 persons whom he met here in Bangladesh. The book sent
was Binary Economics: A New Paradigm, written by Dr. Robert
Ashford of Syracuse University Law School in the USA and Rodney
Shakespeare, an insightful economic author in the UK.
Though not myself an economist, either by training or trade,
I was able to clearly comprehend the brilliance and relevance
of this new science of economics. As a rural development practitioner
in South Asia since 1978, I fully realize the fundamental
importance of both economics and politics for eliminating
poverty. Binary Economics: A New Paradigm offers the scientific
basis upon which the "dreams" presented by the charismatic
Dr. Kurland are beginning to be and will continue to become
reality. The dream that an LDC like Bangladesh can become
an economic leader in the world is possible if the science
of binary economics becomes the new foundation for economic
life in the country.
A World of Extreme Wealth and Immense
Poverty
Humankind is living in a scientifically and technologically
rapidly changing world, but forms of government and economic
systems which today shape the quality of life for people were
developed before the revolutionary changes in our ways of
living took place. Adam Smith and Thomas Jefferson were 18th
century thinkers; and Karl Marx was a mid-19th century thinker.
The theorists who helped form the economic and political systems
by which we live today knew nothing about automobiles, airplanes,
space travel, telephones, televisions, cinema, computers,
bio-engineering and bio-genetics. The economic theorists upon
whom our present economic systems are based lived before there
were multinational corporations, before the process called
"globalization", before the existence of robots
which assemble automobiles--at a time where labor was considered
more important for productivity than machinery, research and
organizational techniques of production. The economic and
political systems of the past simply do not work properly
in todays world.
One of the most unfortunate results from having economic
systems which are not appropriate to todays world is
that wealth is becoming more and more concentrated in the
hands of a very limited number of people while immense numbers
of human beings are living in insecurity, not even having
sufficient income from their labor for providing adequate
food to their families. Dr. Edward Wolff of New York University
in the USA, after extensive research on the income and wealth
patterns in the American economy, has documented how a limited
number of persons in the USA are becoming immensely wealthy
while the majority are becoming poorer, their lives more insecure.
In his recent book Top Heavy he mentions that in the United
States: "...in 1992, the financial wealth of the top
1 percent households was greater than the combined wealth
of the bottom 90 percent" (Edward N. Wolff, research
based on the Federal Reserve's Triennial Survey of Consumer
Finances). Also, "...the wealth of the nation's four
hundred richest families grew by an average $940 million each
from 1997 to 1999, whereas over a recent twelve-year period
(1983-1995), the modest net worth of the bottom 40 percent
of households plummeted 80 percent.
Jeff Gates of the USA in his book Democracy At Risk: Rescuing
Main Street From Wall Street, published in April of 2000,
has shown that a similar situation exists worldwide. He states:
"...a globalized economy in which the world's two hundred
richest people more than doubled their net worth in the four
years to 1999, to more than $1 trillion--on average $5 billion
each.... Their combined wealth ... now equals the combined
annual income of the world's poorest 2.5 billion people"
(p.xiv). The pattern of concentration of wealth has been steadily
increasing over the last several decades, gaining added momentum
with time. It is obviously a result of the existing economic
system, the so-called free market system and the globalization
process. With the concentration of wealth, there is also a
concentration of political power. This is why Jeff Gates and
many others say that faulty economics is leading to a loss
of democracy. People who are insecure, dependent on others
economically, cannot act independently in regard to politics
and government. They lose power to make the decisions which
have the most impact on their present lives and their futures.
With Binary Economics, All Become
Owners And Wealth Is Shared
Binary Economics: A New Paradigm analyzes the causes for
growing concentration of wealth in a few hands and growing
insecurity and poverty for the worlds masses. The book
traces the historical roots of the present economic system
from Adam Smith through other important economists including
Karl Marx and shows where, limited by the realities of their
times, the great economic theorists of the past constructed
a system which could not help but become outdated due to a
faulty perception of the role of labor compared to the role
of capital in the production process, in the creation of wealth.
Binary economics demonstrates the absolute necessity of considering
capital as a second essential factor in production together
with labor. The meaning of "binary" is that there
are two productive factors, not one. The role of capital in
producing wealth is rapidly increasing while the role of labor
is greatly decreasing. This is why those who own capital (factories,
corporations, machinery, technology) are rapidly increasing
their wealth, while requirement for labor, its importance
in production and its value is decreasing. Ownership of capital
is, therefore, the key to wealth creation in todays
world. In the time of Adam Smith and later Marx, labor was
central to productivity; today capital has replaced it as
the central factor.
However, the economic system of today denies the possibility
of ownership of capital to the vast majority of people. They
can depend only on their labor, which is becoming less "valuable"
due to the revolutionary growth of technology. The only solution
to growing inequality and increasing poverty is to restructure
the economic system to make it possible for all to become
owners of capital. Ownership has to become a universal and
fundamental human right.
A Binary Economic System Is Practical;
It Will Become Global
Is it practical to envision that all people could become
owners? If ownership was widely distributed, as proposed in
binary economics, how would the overall economy of a nation
or the world be affected? These two critical questions are
fully discussed in Ashford and Shakespeares book. Louis
Kelso of the USA is the original thinker who began to study
deeply the historical roots of the current economic problems,
to identify their causes and to find creative solutions. Many
of the solutions have been in process of development in the
USA and elsewhere over the past 4 decades. Employee Stock
Ownership Plans (ESOPs) are, no doubt, the best known of the
initiatives so far promoted. ESOPs have now spread outside
the USA to Egypt and other countries. Courses in binary economics
are beginning to be taught in a few universities in the USA.
On November 18, 2000, the University of the District of Columbia
in the capital of the USA (Washington D.C.) held a day-long
conference on "Capital Homesteading: Teaching and Applying
Economic Justice in the Nations Capital". Its purpose
was " ... to explore some innovative concepts and applications
aimed at transforming the District, with special emphasis
on our poorest neighborhoods, into a global model economy
for the 21st century." Even without a fully supportive
legal and financial structure in any country, the growing
number of initiatives for implementing the new system based
on binary economics is showing excellent promise for distributing
wealth among more and more people, as well as enriching local
economies.
What could be expected to happen if any country or the world
economy were based upon the principles advocated in the binary
economic system? The authors of Binary Economics: A New Paradigm
convincingly present the case for much faster growth and a
much more stable and really free market economy. As more and
more people become owners and begin sharing in the dividends
produced through ownership of capital, their purchasing power
will be strengthened, making it possible for them to get more
of the material goods leading to higher standards of living.
Since market demand would thus increase, the requirement for
increased production would lead to additional growth in the
economy.
The case for an economic system based on the principles of
binary economics is further strengthened by its ability to
make use of nearly all present economic structures, requiring
only some changes in policy, a few new financial institutions
and some legal reforms. These are adequately and clearly detailed
in Ashford and Shakespeares masterpiece.
Why Not In Bangladesh?
Why should the already wealthy and powerful American citizenry
be the first and main beneficiaries of the economic system
of the 21st century? Why should Egypt be the most progressive
Muslim country in adopting this beautiful economic system?
Why should China be so interested as to put into the Mandarin
language materials related to this new system? Why should
Russia and Eastern European countries be moving ahead with
study and implementation of the practical programs following
from binary economic theory? And why should the leaders of
the poorest countries of Africa be enthusiastic about incorporating
binary economic structures into their plans for bringing their
people out of their downtrodden LDC status? Above all, why
should not Bangladesh be most progressive of all in studying,
researching, and implementing the new system built upon principles
of binary economics for the elimination of its widespread
poverty, its growth in democracy and for building a stable
and thriving national economy?
Certainly Bangladesh has all the ingredients required for
taking the farsighted and bold initiatives required for bringing
this new system to its people. If there is concern that the
donor community, which provides critical financial assistance
to Bangladesh, might try to obstruct such a new policy direction,
such concern may prove totally unrealistic. In discussions
with representatives of ADB, IMF, the World Bank and USAID
in 1999, Dr. Kurland found no objections or reservations on
the part of any of the donor representatives. With its tens
of millions of poor and its numerous highly qualified economic
experts and many dynamic leaders in all professional sectors,
Bangladesh is an ideal place for becoming the first nation
to fully adopt this economy of the 21st century.
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