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Values, Valuation and Valuing

English

The ascendancy of financial capital has reinforced trends of poverty, illiteracy, concentration of income, wealth and land. In other words, social dynamics has been subordinated to the transnational and financial concentrated corporate power (ITUC, 2007). Indeed, the apprehension of the dynamics and outcomes of the current financial-led growth regime is decisive to the understanding of the economic, social and environmental challenges of the current accumulation regime driven by short-term profits and global competition. As corporations and institutional investors search for liquidity and short-term profits, managers' decisions have turned out to challenge social, economic and environmental sustainability. Globally, income inequality has increased both between countries and within countries. Indeed, business strategies and practices have supported a business model where the concentration of private wealth configures social interactions for the continuation of surplus extraction, obtained from the working population (Foster, 2009). In the last decades, in truth, changing relations among nation states, corporations, investors and workers shaped new trends in macroeconomic instability and social inequality. Under the expansion of monopoly- capital, great concerns have arisen, since policies and investments could pass down social and environmental safeguards. As a matter of fact, decisions taken by private managers - strongly influenced by short- term returns- could turn out to challenge sustainable growth. Mergers, acquisitions and downsizing strategies have submitted the livelihood conditions of millions of workers around the world. As Bauman warned, livelihood conditions turn out to be overwhelmed by uncertainly because of the flexibility required by the new business scenario. In his own words, Flexibility is the slogan of the day, and when applied to the labor market it augurs an end to the job as we know it, announcing instead the advent of work on short-term contracts, rolling contracts or no contracts, positions with no in-built security but the until further notice clause. Working life is saturated with uncertainty (Bauman, 2000:147) In this setting, the commodification of natural resources turned out to be a feature of the long-run process of financial expansion that had been characterized as the financialization of the capitalist economy (Foster, 2009). Looking back, the process of market deregulation opened new investment opportunities in sectors where private enterprises and foreign companies were formerly subject to restrictions such as mining, energy and telecommunications. Despite some local resistance, market liberalization was introduced into many countries historically dominated by state-owned, vertically-integrated monopolies in the energy sector (Markovich, 2012). In the last decade, the 2008 global financial crisis brought new challenges to decisions about energy investments and policies, not only for fossil fuels' availability but also because for significantly damages on environment and climate. The energy global scenario has also been influenced by the economic forecasts of financial institutions that happen to impact not only the valuation of energy investments tied to capital markets but also the commodity prices' volatility. Beside, geopolitical tensions in the Middle East and North Africa continued to impact world oil prices and the shift to a green economy. 2. Ethics and economics: main concerns After the Second World War, the idea of development was associated with the active role of the national state that would support the sustainability of economic growth with social inclusion. After the Bretton Woods crisis, in the seventies, and with the advance of financial globalization, the institutional arrangement of the Welfare State has been shaken. As a result, both the instruments of economic policy and the attendance of social demands were put in question in a context of the redefinition of the scope of public policies. After some decades, it is a reality that global economic integration, guided by market credibility and financial rules, has broadened social exclusion. As a matter of fact, the new interconnections between wealth, production, labor and consumption have strengthened inequalities. Indeed, the apprehension of the current global inequality issues involves the understanding of the deep tensions between the hypertrophy of finance in economic dynamics and the expectations of society about citizenship, labor and income. In this context, labor markets have become a key variable in macroeconomic adjustments and business strategies. Capital mobility, price stability and risk management have favored the regulation of social relations based on individual behaviour and performance. In contemporary capitalist societies, global institutional architecture has favored capital mobility and short term investment decisions - increasingly subordinated to rules of portfolio risk management. While recent changes in productive organization have been based on competitiveness and corporate governance criteria, job instability and fragile conditions of social protection turned out to put pressure on the redefinition of survival strategies. In this settlement, workers have turned out to redefine their skills, become informal entrepreneurs or migrate, among other examples of the current worldwide challenges to citizens (Madi, 2013a). Considering this background, governments have faced increasing challenges to support an ethically defensible approach to working conditions. While money is an end in itself, social behaviors have mainly turned out to be guided by the profit motive. Consequently, social cohesion has been reduced since groups of specific interests have spread their actions and expectations in ways that are desirable to the interest group. Indeed, the outstanding conflicts between solidarity and particular interests have revealed growing tensions between ethical values and individual principles in capitalist societies (Madi, 2013a) In this setting, corporate social responsibility has been a key feature of the reorganization of social interactions in the context of neoliberalism. It involves the adoption of voluntary global values to create new practices in business culture in order to modify the relationship among corporations, employees, clients, suppliers, communities and governments. As a result, the private business sector could be active in protecting the market society. Indeed, the debate about the role of corporations in promoting economic and social development through the benefits of new management and social practices was deepened in the context of the crisis of the Welfare State. The participation of corporations in the solution of social and economic challenges would create new forms of social protection in a globalized market system. As a result, the provision of basic services of health, education, energy, water, among others, would contemplate diversified arrangements among governments, corporations, the so called non-governmental organizations and the communities. However, it is a reality that those practices of corporate social responsibility have not overcome the tensions inherent to the organization of market society. While speculative and short-term portfolio decisions predominate in business strategies, practices of social responsibility turn out to support the profit motive, searching for growing efficiency instead of defeating inequalities. As a result of all these trends, the informal economy - that includes not only enterprises that are not legally regulated, but also employment relations without any kind of social protection - has been growing in developing and developed countries (Madi, 2015). In most of the developing countries, the small businesses' challenges have contributed to the expansion of the informal economy. Small and micro-entrepreneurs are usually subject to complex regulatory barriers. Besides, the access to credit is restricted. As a result, micro and small enterprises reveal poor performance in competitive environments, a lower capacity for innovation and a weak international orientation. Among other obstacles to survival and expansion in the formal economy, the costs of starting up a formal enterprise are outstanding in developing countries. Among these transaction costs, we can highlight: i) the number of procedures that includes all necessary licenses and permits and completion of any notifications, verifications or registrations required by the relevant authorities; and ii) business legislation, specific regulations and fee schedules that are used as sources for start-up cost calculation. See more
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Product Details
  • Publication Date: 01 Jun 2017
  • Publisher: The Green Economics Institute
  • Publication City/Country: United Kingdom
  • Language: English
  • ISBN13: 9781907543647

About

About the Editors Miriam Kennet (UK) is a specialist in Green Economics she is the Co-Founder and the CEO of the Green Economics Institute. She also founded and edits the first Green Economics academic journal in the world the International Journal of Green Economics and she has been credited with creating the academic discipline of Green Economics. Green Economics has been recently described by the Bank of England as one of the most vibrant and healthy areas of economics at the moment. Having researched at Oxford University Oxford Brookes and South Bank University she is a member of the Environmental Change Institute Oxford University. She has taught lectured and spoken at Universities and events all over Europe from Alicante to Oxford and Bolzano and to government officials from Montenegro and Kosovo to The UK Cabinet Office Transport Department National Government School and Treasury and spoken in Parliaments from Scotland to Austria and The French Senate and Estonia. She is also a regular speaker at public events of all kinds and an after dinner speaker. She has a delegation to the UNFCC COP Kyoto Climate Change Conferences and headed up a delegation to RIO + 20 Earth Summit: Greening the Economy in RIO Brazil. She regularly speaks on TV around Europe most recently in Belgium and Estonia and the BBC has made a special programme about her life and work. She runs regular conferences at Oxford University about Green Economics. She publishes regularly and has over 100 articles chapters and other publications. She has been featured in the Harvard Economics Review and Wall Street Journal as a leader. Recently she was named one of 100 most powerful Unseen Global Women by the Charity One World action for her global work and won the Honour Award at the Green Business Awards from the Luxembourg Minister of Finance for her work. Photo - Miriam Kennet after a speech at the House of Commons Professor Dr. Maria Alejandra Madi (Brazil) has a PhD in Economics and a MSc in Philosophy. She is Chair of the World Economic Association Conferences Program and editor of the WEA Pedagogy Blog. Currently she is also Assistant Editor of the International Journal of Pluralism and Economics Education and director of the Ordem dos Economistas do Brasil. As she was a Professor at UNICAMP Brazil from 1983 until 2012 her career includes visiting professorships at the University of Manitoba (2008) and the University of Kassel (2010). More recently she co-edited some of the WEA books: The economics curriculum: toward a radical reformation and Ideas toward a new international financial architecture? She also coedited some of the Green Economic Institute books: The Greening of Global Finance The Greening of Latin America and The Greening of Global Banking and Finance. Her recent books include Small Business in Brazil: competitive global challenges and Pluralist Readings in economics: key concepts and policy tools. Her research interests focus on finance economic development and social justice. Karen Alvarenga Windham-Lord holds a Ph.D and a Mphil from the University of Cambridge. She also holds two LLMs in Tax Law (UFMG Brazil) and in Environmental Law and Conservation (Kent University UK). Her main concern is to use economic instruments public policy and the law to improve the state of the environment reduce poverty and enhance livelihoods of local communities. She is also a consultant for the International Institute for Sustainable Development (IISD): researching payment for ecosystem services for watershed in mountain areas in Brazil; and taking part in UN multilateral environmental agreements on climate change biodiversity forests SDGs and water to produce ENB reports. Pamela Harling graduated in Natural Sciences from the University of Cambridge and has an MSc in Information Science and one in Landscape Ecology. She has worked in technical libraries for BP and the Central Electricity Generating Board in the conservation sector (The Woodland Trust) environmental consultancy (Environmental Resources Management) and environmental policy (International Institute for Environment and Development). Since 2002 Pamela has worked for a number of research organisations administering European Commission grants for large collaborative projects. At present she is employed in the Research and Knowledge Transfer office at Middlesex University advising researchers on funding from the European Commission. Whilst working for the Climate Change Group of IIED she attended the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change Conference of the Parties held in Posnan Poland. Outside work Pamela has become increasingly interested in how communities can address sustainability issues and particularly how to work towards a low carbon future. She is an active member of the Muswell Hill Sustainability Group and is Company Secretary for the local community energy enterprise - En10ergy Ltd. She is on the management team of Sustainable Haringey Growing in Haringey the Low Carbon Communities Network the Green Economics Institute and Transition Crouch End. About the Contributors Dr Paul O'Brien Dr Paul O'Brien is an Associate Fellow of the National College of Art and Design Dublin. He is a former spokesperson for the Irish Greens. His book on basic income Basic Income: Pennies from Heaven (The History Press Ireland) will appear in June 2017. Koryo Suzuki He is an environmental economist and econometrician from Japan. His degree is MSc in Economics (Environmental Pathway) at the University of Manchester (UK) MSc Environmental Economics at the University of York (UK) and BA in International Relations at Ritsumeikan University (Japan). His research interest is particularly the sustainable agricultural development (e.g. environmental destruction caused by the green revolution in developing countries and the alternative sustainable agricultural development of such as organic farming) by using economics as well as using interdisciplinary view point such as food security and human right. Dr Enrico Tezza (Italy) is a former Senior Training Policies Specialist at ILO Turin Centre and has a background in Social Research and Evaluation studies. President of Club for UNESCO Vicenza since 2014. His latest publications include Human Development and Emotional Sustainability (2015) and Mindful Learning (2016)..He is a senior training specialist and has a background in social research and policy evaluation studies. After a career in the Italian Ministry of Labour and local public institutions he joined the International Labour Organisation in Turin in 1992. He is the president of the Club for UNESCO Vicenza as well as the labour market advisor for the Green Economics Institute. Subjects covered vary from training policy to employment and active labour market measures. His main publication was Evaluating Social Programmes: the relevance of relationships and his latestpublications include Human Development and Emotional Sustainability and Universal Declaration of Emotional Sustainability Right. C.R. Yadu is a Ph.D Candidate at the Centre for Development Studies (CDS) Trivandrum India. His principal research interests are inequality agrarian change and labour relations. His research approaches these issues from a political economy perspective. Aabid Firdausi M.S. Department of Economics University of Kerala Trivandrum India. Researcher on the current economic and social impact of globalization drawing lessons from political economy economic sociology and philosophy. M. Fernanda Caporale Madi (Brazil Netherlands) is a PhD candidate in Law and Economics at Erasmus University Rotterdam; LLM in Law and Economics at Erasmus University Rotterdam (2014); Bachelor degree in Law at Mackenzie University Brazil; Bachelor degree in Economics at University of Sao Paulo Brazil; Member of ASCOLA - Academic Society for Competition Law; and Member of the Competition Law Studies Group at Mackenzie University. Arturo Hermann is a Senior research fellow at the Italian National Institute of Statistics (Istat) Rome Italy. In his main research fields - Institutional and Keynesian Economics Sustainable Development Political Economy also considered in their relations with psychology and psychoanalysis - he has authored five books and numerous articles in ce 2006. Baba Aye is the Health and Social Services Policy Officer of Public Services International (PSI). He has been active in a broad spectrum of social movements over the last three decades. He is a fellow of the Home of Mother Earth Foundation (HOMEF) and an Instigator of the HOMEF Sustainability Academy. Baba Aye is a member of the editorial boards of Review of African Political Economy (ROAPE) and the Global Labour Colum. He is the author of Era of Crises and Revolts (2012). Dr Lavinia Tezza Law studies at University of Padua and Trento. Criminal International Law at Poitiers University. Air law and terrorism at University of Aix en Provence International Criminal Justice Conference in Meran. Study visit at United Nations High Commissioner for Refugee Geneva United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights Geneva. Spring School at United Nations Interregional Crime and Justice Research Institute Rome. Henry Cox (UK) author of Building Sustainable Communities: The Life and Thought of Henry Cox Green Economics Institute Books Juliana Lima Mafia Is a Researcher from Brazil. Sofia Cliff UK MSc Security Studies Public Policy. Researcher. Henrique Domingos Is a Brazilian Lawyer and Researcher on Environmental Law. Carlos Alberto Esteves Is a Lawyer and Researcher from Brazil.

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