Global business elite confronts crisis of Western capitalism
Switzerland: Leaders of the global business elite were
confronted on Wednesday with the fear that the Western model of
capitalism has failed and is about to be shoved aside by emerging
powers.
Over four decades, the annual World Economic Forum in the Swiss ski
resort of Davos has become an emblem of the triumphant market but this
year delegates admitted that state capitalism on the Chinese model is in
the ascendant.
Even political leaders, including German Chancellor Angela Merkel,
also said it was time for a rethink among European policy-makers.
Four days of public debate and private networking kicked off with a
stark warning from a panel of experts that the historic motors of the
20th century global economy will have to reform or die.
“I think we have three to four years in the West to improve the
economic model that we have, and if we don't do that soon I think we've
lost the game,” warned David Rubenstein, managing director of the
Carlyle investment fund.
The 62-year-old billionaire has done very well out of financial
capitalism, the US firm paid him a $134 million annual bonus this month,
but he warned that the West needs to get its deficits under control and
return to growth.
“If we don't do that soon, when we are here in three to four years
... the game will be over for the type of capitalism that many of us
have lived through and thought was the best type of capitalism,”
Rubenstein said.
Global labour leader Sharan Burrow, general secretary of the
International Trade Union Confederation, urged corporations and
governments to work with workers to develop a new economic model -- and
warned of a backlash. “Let's get a seat at the table for the real
economy. Will the real economy please stand up, because the financial
markets are killing you,” she said. “No-one will like the social unrest
that will follow.” But on the same panel, Professor Raghuram Rajan of
University of Chicago, warned the 20th century strength of the western
economy had already failed to live up to its promises to rich world
workers. “Governments made a ton of promises in the 1960s, when growth
was very high. We had the welfare state across the industrial world. And
then growth started falling off in the 70s, in the 80s,” he said.
“Some countries, the UK and the US, tried to revive it through
deregulation and managed for a while, but in general growth is too slow
in the industrial world relative to the promises we have made,” he said.
AFP |