The Market StateModern technology, globalization, the multinational corporation, and large amounts of unengaged, surplus capital1 are heralding a new era that is changing the traditional boundaries between government and business and that underlies the new concern about corporate social responsibility in the world of business. |
...the state is becoming more driven by market dynamics and the corporate principals of operational effectiveness, and the world of business is becoming more concerned and involved with social and cultural responsibilities... |
As many commentators on rising affluence and improved living conditions have observed, the life lived today by the average employee in America is better in health, comfort, personal fulfillment, and well-being than that enjoyed by the Queens of England in centuries past.
Today, there are more than 63,000 multinational corporations, employing over 90 million people across both the developed and developing worlds. What is emerging is a world economy, where the world’s largest corporations are larger in economic size than most of the nations in the world, and the citizens on the street experience greater well-being than the royalty of centuries past.
Within this environment, the old topography of government and business is rapidly changing, and with these changes, so too are the responsibilities of both governent and business shifting.
The Emergence of the Market State
The shifting roles between government and business can be understood by considering the new theory of “market statehood”advanced by Professor Philip Bobbitt, a historian and constitutional scholar, wherein the new emerging “market state” is juxtaposed to the now passing nation state.3
The nation state arose after the Civil War in the United States, and in Europe at the end of World War I with the destruction of the 19th century empires. The role of these new nation states was to advance the welfare of their people by becoming responsibile for the economic well-being of their citizens.
Hitler and Benito Mussolini. The communist model, advanced in the Soviet Union by Valdimir Lenin and Joseph Stalin. And the parliamentarian-capitalistic model adopted and advanced by the U.S. and the U.K. under the leadership of Franklin Roosevelt and Winston Churchhill. World War II, and the subsequent “cold war” era, provided the stage upon which each theory of nation statehood advanced its claims until it became clear that the greatest true welfare for the greatest number was provided through individual freedom, democracy, parliamentary-representational government, and a capitalistic economy.
In the United States, the nation state pursued the material wealth of its citizens by maximizing the opportunities for individual advancement and by ensuring a fair distribution of the emerging wealth.During this time, business and government worked hand-in-glove to accomplish this work through the government regulation of markets and the operation of social welfare programs.Toward the end of the era of the nation state, in the U.S. it became increasingly clear that markets provided the most effective way to run an economy, and thus the incentives and dynamics of the marketplace increasingly replaced regulation and governmental social programs.
Today, under the emerging market state, the state finds its legitimacy in fostering the free enterprise and free markets necessary to increase the aggregate wealth of the citizenry, in continuing to maximize opportunities for individual advancement, in encouraging the growth of public-private partnerships, and in devolving the welfare state.
Thus we see a trend toward (i) the deregulation of industries making markets more dynamic and fruitful, (ii) the emergence of public-private partnerships such as those between government and business evidenced during the recent Iraqi war, and (iii) the disappearance of traditional welfare programs in favor of job retraining programs and the continuing education that suit individuals to play new, expanded roles within the changing economy.
Business and Social Responsibility
This new state model, with its shifted conception of the role of the state, reciprocally puts a new emphasis upon business and its role in society, thus innaugurating a new distribution of responsibility between the state and business.
As government structures the market dynamics that drive wealth and prosperity, business emerges to provide opportunity, livelihood, health care, continuing education, social mobility, and to assume new social and cultural responsibility for society.
Since the 1970s, with the emergence of small business, public markets, deregulation, and the upsurge in non-profit organizations, the marketplace has increasingly been left to deal with social problems through philanthropy. As welfare continues to devolve and the non-profits are attacked for their inefficiencies and failure to deliver social and cultural benefits, business is challenged to apply its wealth and operational efficiencies for the common good.
Thus, the areas targeted by governmental social programs and non-profit initiatives, long inadequately funded with tax dollars and philanthropy, become the new focus of business as a matter of corporate social responsibility.
Corporations, if they will remain successful in the marketplace, must adopt and make congruent and contiguous with their strategies, the well-being of the societies within which they operate. |
Today, these are matters of corporate strategy, no less than are global market penetration and building brand awareness. But not just as public relations or expediencies of brand management, but under a new business worldview that sees societal success as corporate success, and corporate success as societal well-being and advancement.
Today, under the new market state and the ethos of corporate social responsibility, success in the marketplace emerges from pursuing those paths for business development that also improve society, build the culture, and develop wealth for prosperity.
1) “Surplus capital,” often referred to as “overhang” by venture capitalists, refers to the as yet uninvested money in their coffers that only awaits good investment opportunities.
2) Global Inc.: An Atlas of the Multinational Corporation, by Medard Gabel, 2003.
These numbers point to a remarkable transformation in the world and de facto portend a promising change in the human condition.
3) The Shield of Achilles: War, Peace and the Course of History, by Philip Bobbitt, Alfreed A. Knopf, 2002.
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