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PRIVACY
Opinion

 Why urgent action is needed to reform malfunctioning capitalism

Measures needed include greater parity between debt and equity and tougher action against collusive behaviour

The controversial collapse of firms like Carillion have raised concerns over lax oversight.(Image: Getty Images Europe)


I was prompted to write this piece by three articles recently printed in a national newspaper. There on the same page were three nominally unrelated stories.

The first concerned the proposed take-over of a defence technology company responsible for the sensitive task of protecting Trident submarines, the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ’s nuclear deterrent, by another defence company. The acquirer had previously been British owned but was now controlled by a US private-equity fund, which had largely divested it of its º£½ÇÊÓÆµ manufacturing activities.

The second article concerned an enquiry by the competition body into collusive price rigging amongst a group of construction companies. The regulator had found customers had paid too much. The final article related to the circulation of ‘best-practice’ advice to auditors by their regulatory body reminding the profession of its duty to demonstrate independence in its activities.

All these come at a time when the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ economy faces major challenges in both the short and longer term. In the short term there is a real possibility of the economy moving into recession, accompanied by rising inflation and falling real incomes. In the longer term the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ is experiencing enormous challenges on key issues affecting growth; productivity is at an all-time low, not just in Wales but in most regions of the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ; capital investment is declining and expenditure on research and development lags behind competitor nations. Given these circumstances is it not surprising that one professional forecaster predicts the only country to have a slower near-term rate of growth than ours is Russia?

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The reader may be scratching their head to understand how weak economic performance and these events are connected. In my opinion the connection to be made is that a tainted form of capitalism has evolved over a number of decades and this has led to an underperforming economy.

To be clear I am in no doubt that even with the many faults the contemporary system has exposed markets provide the most effective means of creating and distributing goods and services. Returns and rewards should be earned by those who take risks and by innovative actions providing the goods and services that consumers are happy to pay for. They achieve this by investing in capital, whether it is equipment or human capital by training the workforce, securing productivity benefits.

But the style of capitalism we experience now is what economic commentators label ‘rentier capitalism’. This is the state of affairs where a disproportionate share of national income and wealth is extracted by those who live off income from property, which includes intellectual property and investments. In other words, the ability to extract disproportionate levels of ‘rent’ or income from everybody else. Many behave as balance sheet engineers, frequently seeking the immediate extraction of value to maintain fund returns.