Changing Corporate Purpose To Maximize Human Potential

Many thanks to Max from NerdWallet, whom has kindly contributed an article to my blog! NerdWallet is a very interesting site where it looks at personal finance for the common folks in America and provides vast information on different financial instruments that can help you in your financial and life planning.

Changing Corporate Purpose To Maximize Human Potential

According to former Harvard Medical School professor, Martha Stout, 4% of the global population—that is over 12 million Americans or 200,000 Singaporeans—are sociopaths; they have no conscious empathy for human or animal life. This characteristic permeates through our current political climate and economic institutions. It trickles down into media outlets and impacts the market by way of blind consumerism and corporate greed.

Although many aspects of capitalism are beneficial and healthy, there is a lack of accountability and morality, especially in U.S. markets and in how large corporations handle their operations. Corporations inherently set out to maximize shareholder value above all else. This focus on monetary value creates an indifference towards moral behavior rooted in basic human value. Greed and power only come to light when individuals like Bernie Madoff are finally arrested for copiously unique financial scandals. This greed mentality is a downward spiral without escape because the ultimate goal does not include human necessity and environmental responsibility.

HOW WE DEFINE SUCCESS MUST CHANGE
How we measure success also contributes to the sociopath mindset. When success is measured by monetary value alone, there is no room for development in the things that are truly sustainable to human life – education, personal accountability, social welfare or the pursuit of happiness because the goal is simply more money. This may have worked for the last 3 decades, however, we must change the way we currently define success because it is no longer sustainable. This concentration on monetary success has permeated the depths of our society, including our education systems; educators and families raise children with this current measure of success and it is contributing to the moral breakdown of the human psyche.

GLOBALIZATION AND ITS INFLUENCE ON MARKET MORALITY
Globalization has further compounded this money-centric view through the exploitation of third-world labor by outsourcing and moving jobs in locations where human life is further degraded. On July 1, 1997, the release of Hong Kong from British rule accompanied a new era of accelerated globalization and international business and the moving of manufacturing jobs overseas in order to lower consumer prices. At the time, it was thought to add a healthy international scope to and boost the world global economies. In reality, what we have now is the twisted, ugly stepsister that is the foundation of the economic volatility and geopolitical crisis we see today. Consumers are stoking the fires because they increasingly demand low prices for low quality products. These are the consequences of the sociopathic thought processes that consider profits before people.

GEOPOLITICAL IMPACT OF CORPORATE GREED
In Bangladesh, American companies capitalize on cheap labor for manufacturing the clothes we buy from Wal-Mart, H&M Clothing, The Gap and J.C. Penney to name a few. Just in the last few months, several factory explosions in Bangladesh have exposed the brutal reality of the trillion dollar garment industry. One of these factories, in the Rana Plaza complex in Dhaka, collapsed and killed 1,000 workers in April 2013. It is the country’s worst industrial disaster.

In Africa, the consumer demand for diamonds has created a volatile situation in the Congo. Those diamond profits pass through the black market into the hands of warlords – contributing to global geopolitical instability.

Both the U.S. and Singapore have a lot in common when it comes to characteristics of sociopathic indifference. Singapore, also one of world’s wealthiest nations, shares a similar apathy to corporate greed and its impact on our global citizens. In October of 2011, the Occupy Wall Street movement spread globally with several demonstrations across Europe and Asia. Singapore – one of the wealthiest nations had no turnout and touted “What’s missing in this picture?” in the next morning’s paper referencing a photo of the rally spot where only 3 policemen stood.
   
WHERE DO WE GO FROM HERE?
It is difficult to say how we, as a society can resolve this. It’s obvious that we need to fundamentally shift our thinking away from monetary gain toward basic humanity and the welfare of our environment. We must instill in our children the value of sustainability and those with a conscious must focus their efforts in becoming engaged citizens, protecting the environment and change the flow of our pocketbooks toward investing in our future sustainability on all economic levels. And finally, we need to abolish corporate dogma from “maximize shareholder value” to “maximize human potential”.

Maxime Rieman is a writer for NerdWallet, a financial literacy site that provides consumers with information ranging from finding car insurance comparisons to fighting corporate greed.


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