This interim report considers aspects of current company structure, its strengths and weaknesses, and looks at what companies are for and their responsibilities to those who rely on them for their well-being. It considers various approaches to meet particular concerns and explains why these do not address some of the underlying issues. It then outlines an alternative model, the Relational Company, its founding principles and characteristics. Finally, it describes a proposal for a charter which could be adopted by companies.the Relational Company, its founding principles and characteristics. Finally, it describes a proposal for a charter which could be adopted by companies.
Categories:
briefing
Tags: community, firm, global, individual
http://voxeu.org/ Reported here by: SPMG, 7 August 2009
Mortgage-backed securities have played a major role in the financial crisis and aren’t very popular as a result. This column documents macroeconomic benefits of these instruments, showing that economies with more developed markets for securitised mortgage debt share more consumption risk with other economies.
Categories:
briefing, commentary
Tags: firm, global, macro
Since the onset of the financial crisis, there has been an increase in the number of people in London engaging in voluntary work – work that can be a way of practising and expressing austerity . Andrea Kelly, Coordinator of London Jesuit Volunteers, describes the often counter-cultural practice of volunteering.
Categories:
briefing
Tags: community, global, individual, moral
Morality matters for economic performance: G. Tabellini
http://voxeu.org/ Reported here by: SPMG, 3 August 2009
In numerous poor or stagnating countries, politicians are ineffective and corrupt, public goods are under-provided and public policies confer rents to privileged élites, law enforcement is inadequate, and moral hazard is widespread inside public and private organisations. There is not just one institutional failure. Typically, the countries or regions that fail in one dimension also fail in many other aspects of collective behaviour.
One of the main challenges of current research in economic growth and development is identifying the mechanism through which distant political and economic history shapes the functioning of current institutions. The author, a professor of economics at Bocconi University, claims that an important channel for this shaping is individuals’ morality (defined as individual values and convictions about the scope of application of norms of good conduct). It is an important factor in economic outcomes.
Categories:
briefing, commentary
Tags: community, firm, global, individual, macro, moral
Prophesy and progress in ethics: J. Moffatt SJ
http://www.thinkingfaith.org/ Reported here by: SPMG, 3 August 2009
What do we need to do in order to live a good life, and why should we want to do this? John Moffatt SJ looks at different approaches to developing an ethical framework, and examines the relationship of religion to various ethical traditions.
Categories:
briefing
Tags: community, firm, global, individual, money, moral
Timelines of policy responses to the global financial crisis: R. Hellerstein, W. Ryan, J. Shrader
http://voxeu.org/ Reported here by: SPMG, 6 August 2009
This column introduces timelines, produced by the New York Fed, that organise and illustrate policymakers’ responses to the global financial crisis. Over the past two years, and particularly since the intensification of the global financial crisis in the fall of 2008, new information has been released at an astonishing pace. Between the breaking developments in the markets and the vast array of policy initiatives across countries, it has become increasingly challenging to keep track of the complex and evolving response to the crisis.
Categories:
briefing
Tags: global, macro, united states
Exit right - A special report on international banking: Economist
http://www.economist.com/ Reported here by: SPMG, 6 August 2009
This special report suggests the contract between society and banks will get stricter. Nothing highlights the scale of banking’s upheaval better than the intervention of governments. An industry that embodied the free market turns out to be pathetically dependent on the state for its survival… it is whistling in the wind to suggest that the state should withdraw from its commitment to support banks in times of trouble. “The body cannot survive without blood,” says Bo Lundgren, one of the architects of Sweden’s vaunted bank-rescue package of the early 1990s, “and the economy cannot survive without banks.” But now that this commitment has been called on so dramatically, three questions arise. The first is how long the state will remain so explicitly involved in the industry. The second is what immediate distortions that involvement creates. And the third is what additional charges governments will levy on the industry in future for providing banks with such a huge safety net today.
Categories:
briefing, commentary
Tags: firm, global, macro, money, united kingdom
Continuing Presence Archbishop Romero: R. Cardenal SJ
http://www.thinkingfaith.org/ Reported here by: SPMG, 5 August 2009
Easter Monday 2009 marked the 28th anniversary of the martyrdom of Monseñor Oscar Romero, Archbishop of San Salvador, who once said, ‘as a Christian, I do not believe in death without resurrection. If they kill me I will rise again in the people of El Salvador.’ Rodolfo Cardenal SJ writes about the legacy of Archbishop Romero – very much alive in the Church today.
Categories:
briefing, commentary
Tags: community, global, individual, latin america, moral
What makes us happy? J. Wolf Shenk
http://www.theatlantic.com/ Reported here by: SPMG, 3 August 2009
Is there a formula—some mix of love, work, and psychological adaptation—for a good life? For 72 years, researchers at Harvard have been examining this question, following 268 men who entered college in the late 1930s through war, career, marriage and divorce, parenthood and grandparenthood, and old age. Here, for the first time, a journalist gains access to the archive of one of the most comprehensive longitudinal studies in history. Its contents, as much literature as science, offer profound insight into the human condition—and into the brilliant, complex mind of the study’s longtime director, George Vaillant.
Categories:
briefing, commentary
Tags: global, individual, moral, united states