CAUSE OF THE MORAL CRISIS


Although there are a myriad of contributing factors, the New Dialogue participants are persuaded that there is a major cause of the current moral crisis deserving special scrutiny. It is a cause in the sense of a triggering event which has brought about great change and, in the process, has thrown persons and society out of the practice of thinking about collective problems from a moral point of view. The cause is the new economic order of global market capitalism. The new way of thinking is a form of economic rationality that we have termed the "rationality of cash flow capitalism". It is not an immoral, but rather an amoral way of thinking. Legitimate in its proper domain of economics, finance, and business calculation, the cash flow capitalist rationality has proven disruptive when used as the total mindset in formulating corporate or government policies required in response to changes in the global market.

Having made a charge that could sound like a criticism of capitalism in general, we hasten to add a qualification and clarification. This charge is not intended as a judgment about capitalism as an economic ideology. We are not suggesting that the solution to the crisis lies in replacing capitalism with another economic system. This charge is an internal criticism. We believe that capitalism is by important measurements the most successful economic system ever developed. It has raised the material well being of the masses of citizens in those societies which have practiced it to levels never dreamed possible.

However, there are aspects of the current mode of marketplace rationality that require close scrutiny and care in using it. With the defeat of Communism and the decline of other totalitarian political economic forms, global market capitalism emerged as the new economic order, the most powerful institutional force in the world today, dominating people's lives in ways that those who control global markets and those who are controlled by them may not even be aware of. The charge of causative factor of the moral crisis is directed then not against capitalism but against the amoral cash flow capitalist rationality which has come to be accepted as the rationality necessary to compete successfully in conducting economic and business affairs in the new world order. Moral considerations have less and less chance to enter economic decision processes. Global market capitalism is under scrutiny and criticism because it has given license and a wider franchise to this amoral rationality, as it has employed it while spreading the ideology of capitalism in the post Cold War world.

This has come about without being noticed by many who are occupied in just keeping up with the changes taking place. As capitalism found itself in an environment of unopposed power, the goal of maximum economic return was being interpreted in business contexts through the finance paradigm of "cash flow." In this paradigm, money, that is, "cash", and the speed at which it moves, that is, "flow", was the primary concept through which economic benefits were being calculated. Similar sounding concerns about "money capitalism" and "finance capitalism" have been raised before. However, the increased emphasis on the short term which "flow" adds, and the newly available computer power to project the present far into the future and then return have combined to produce a different form of economic rationality. The idea of short term financial returns and maximum macro-economic benefits being coincident found its way into general economic thinking. The new rationality became a major element in the way that economic policies, institutions and systems were developed and evaluated. In this way of thinking it is money in a fast rate of flow that has value as capital. Other traditional forms of capital, such as land, physical assets, human beings, natural resources, etc. were no longer considered intrinsically valuable but were valued increasingly in terms of what they were able to generate in cash flow. Against this amoral rationality and the concentrations of economic power that have ensued in the new economic order, the moral heritage of capitalism and the unstated moral boundaries inherent in the system were largely forgotten. In the face of such powerful global economic forces the separate states and nations have found it difficult to reassert these moral boundaries through political process.

Close scrutiny would reveal, we believe, that the widespread application of this rationality, and the one dimensional view of economic value that it represents, has resulted in many of the social problems that are symptoms of the moral crisis in both developed and developing countries: excessive corporate downsizing, growing disparities in the distribution of wealth, inner city decay, the corruption of political processes, the commercialization of the medical and legal fields, and the economic instability and human oppression now being felt in the developing world.

An especially troubling aspect of the process is that the cash flow is increasingly controlled by, and therefore is ending up in, fewer and fewer hands. Because of the growing concentrations of wealth administered under this economic rationality, and the resulting social and economic hardships experienced in both the developed and developing countries, we have become gravely concerned that Marxism's criticism of capitalism, namely, that it will generate monopolies of power resulting in widespread disparities of wealth and social injustice, are beginning to appear to manyas ominously prophetic, even from the grave of its seeming 1989 demise. We do not agree with Marx that this outcome is an inevitable result of capitalism but feel it may yet come about as a result of this rationality and the associated forces which have been unleashed alongside global capitalism. We are concerned that if these forces persist unchecked that the world could soon experience increasing social disorder. The result will be great pain to persons and societies, and capitalism itself will be found at fault.

When market capitalism was the bulwark against Communist imperialism, its economic activities and structures may have had a clearer moral mandate. On close examination under current circumstances, however, the global market system as it is now operating is no longer entitled to automatic moral sanction. Times have changed. Capitalism is no longer the counterforce to a repressive totalitarian ideology. Economic activities that may have been tolerated in a Cold War context may not to be condoned in peace. To regain its status as the preferred economic system, capitalism must acknowledge its moral heritage. As a part of this, the rationality under which it is being conducted must also account for itself under moral principles.

The situation seems to be this. Despite the economic benefits the system seems to offer, the new economic order is engendering a rationality which disregards the unique value of persons, allows conditions which distort moral freedom, and tolerates a disrespect for the natural world that is morally out of bounds. In short, the current economic order does not appropriately sustain human persons or human community and does not represent a sustainable use of the natural world. If each human is viewed as having intrinsic value and needing certain conditions of freedom to live the moral life, then it follows that there must be a limit to the degree of economic inequality that those who operate the economic system can permit in a global society. A proper respect for nature is another limit that a global economic system must observe to retain its status as a moral institution. A legitimate economic system cannot view the increasing depletion of Nature's bounty as a way to get around the problem of economic inequality. Providing a moral response to these charges presents a serious challenge to advocates of capitalism because that is the system under which these activities are taking place.

The concern of many, including those of us in the New Dialogue, is that unrestrained by moral self awareness, this amoral rationality could soon yield a society which exalts a feverish pursuit of money and a culture of a "consumption goods" hedonism. It would lead to grossly unjust differences in wealth and income and, as a byproduct, breed a new feudal elite of autonomous Masters of the Universe. The subjects of this new order, those humans of least cash value, the poorest of the poor, will increasingly be treated as outcasts: in America, either as prisoners of welfare ghettoes which undermine all potential for self-development and become a breeding ground for every social pathology, or as inmates incarcerated in an ever expanding system of "correctional" institutions; in developing countries, as denizens of teeming shanty towns of cardboard houses, open sewers and roving gangs of starving homeless youths. It is this frightening prospect and the speed with which it is becoming a reality that motivates our effort to begin a dialogue on the moral crisis.

How are the those of us who are advocates of capitalism to respond? The increasing concentration of wealth and other aspects of the new economic order are indications that it may not even be a true form of capitalism. If capitalism's founding theorists were correct, because of the ideas which form the core of economic liberalism, if it were true capitalism it would be self correcting with its internal moral compass. It may be an as yet unnamed form of economic arrangement that we are confronting. Perhaps a better description might be "cash flow feudalism", for the new form of global economic arrangement is exhibiting some of the same forms of concentrations of power and economic servitude that characterized the feudal form of political economy. Under such a view, the barons of this new feudal order would be the persons of significant wealth and the knights those who serve them, corporate executives and those in the financial world, who control not manors but cash flow sources. Pursuing a goal of maximizing cash flow and short term benefit, they dictate the terms under which all of humanity lives, accidentally or unknowingly overlooking such moral considerations as human dignity, conditions of freedom, duties of community and respect for the natural world. Many of these barons and knights, ironically, may not yet be aware of the new found power that they hold and thus may not have come to terms with the moral responsibilities that are attached to it. The hope of the New Dialogue is that as the barons of "cash flow feudalism" begin to recognize that certain moral boundaries are necessary to maintain stable economic and social institutions, they will help navigate the global economic system to a more human and moral form of capitalism.

Moving Toward Solutions

Having outlined our view that the crisis is due largely to the displacement of moral rationality by a morally unaccountable cash flow rationality in conducting economic affairs, we must begin to look for solutions to the problems. The conclusion of the New Dialogue participants is that if a human and moral form of capitalism is to prevail (and that is our hope) we must not allow the current economic paradigm, and the amoral rationality by which it operates, to roam the globe in the name of capitalism, claiming the rightful spoils of the Cold War. Rather, in order to legitimate its victory over Communism, we who support capitalism must undertake a careful evaluation of the human activities that the current economic structure is encouraging or giving rise to, examine its moral roots, and help begin a reform in the direction of a peacetime form of market capitalism.

The participants of the New Dialogue have started the dialogue process by focusing attention on the set of problems emerging in the new economic order. We intend to continue by looking very closely at the details of current circumstances and asking the question, "Is the current economic system sustainable in terms of its impact on society and the natural world?" In answering this question we are looking at what it is doing to persons, to human communities and societies around the globe, and to the natural world in order to provide the economic benefits it produces. Moreover, since the new economic order involves not only economic institutions but the political institutions which give them support, the collective activities to be evaluated involve both the private and public sector.

Although the lack of a common moral ground for challenging the effects of this "cash flow feudalist rationality" constitutes what many today see and experience as a crisis in society, it must be recognized that the crisis is decisively moral and spiritual in nature and personal, not just social, and must be resolved first at those deeper personal levels.

Given that the moral crisis was triggered by economic exigency, an evaluation of daily economic activities must be undertaken at the individual level by each of us as market participants. Each person must be ready to ask in economic or business situations whether some personal self restraint is necessary in the economic sphere in order to achieve a more moral community and global society. Are we, each of us, willing to do what we can to bring about a human and moral form of capitalism as the legacy that our society will live under and export to other parts of the world?

The goal of the New Dialogue is to initiate a dialogue around these and related questions, and address them with reference to the ideas we have set forth, all with the hope of fostering the sort of moral society and economy that we all seek.


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