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A Tale of Two Corporations Helen Alford In the English-speaking world of today, the word “corporation” is mostly used in the US, or in places influenced by US terminology, to describe businesses that have been “incorporated” and benefit from limited liability. In general discussion, the word tends to be associated with bigger, or at least medium-sized, businesses rather than small ones – in the general imagination, corporations are the GM’s, GE’s and Ford’s of this world. Interestingly enough, the rise to power of these megabusinesses in the US of the first third of the 20th century coincided with rising interest in an older version of the idea of the corporation in certain European countries. And perhaps not surprisingly, the modern business corporations may have something to learn from the earlier concept of corporation despite the latter’s troubled history in the last century. At least, that is one possible consequence of the thinking that was behind the conference on “The Good Company” in October 2006, some of the papers of which are published in this number of OIKONOMIA.
Europe in the 1920s and 30s was struggling with the effects of the
First World War, and indeed, gradually sliding towards another. Even
before the end of the war itself, extreme movements had started to
come to power, in the form of the communist regime in Russia,
followed shortly after its end by the rise to power of Mussolini in
1922 and the consolidation of the Fascist state. Germany took a
little longer to arrive at its version of totalitarianism, but by
1933, Hitler had managed to come to power. Other states, such as
Austria, were also moving in a similar direction. When the
stockmarket crash hit the US in Oct 1929, leading to the Great
Depression, it seemed to many that the US was experiencing an
economic version of what was going on in Europe: the collapse of the
liberal-capitalist politico-economic system. Meanwhile, the
communist system in Russia was doing quite nicely in comparison.
Although many were attracted to an authoritarian (right-wing) form
of politics to prevent a meltdown of society and a communist
takeover of politics on a wide scale, others were looking for an
alternative both to liberalism and to authoritarianism. The idea
that came to the fore in this context was corporatism. Corporatism got a bad name precisely because it got picked up and applied for their ends by the very authoritarian regimes to which it was originally intended to be an alternative. Although this experience is instructive, it should not mean that we treat corporatism in itself as tainted or fail to recognise what was of enduring value in this idea. One of the main problems that thinkers tried to address using the corporatist approach were the consequences of too much emphasis on the rights and liberties of the individual. As many point out, including Pius XI in his 1931 encyclical Quadragesimo anno, such an approach:
·
Gives
priority to conflict and competition over harmony, order and
cooperation; Pius XI makes three key points about corporations in the corporatist sense (though nowhere does he use the word “corporatism” as such):
·
Functional groups like corporations, that focus on certain
industries/markets and certain professional groups, bring together
the workers and capital owners involved in a particular industry,
creating a bridging structure between them that helps to balance the
economic, class antagonism that exists between them; As we said above, as an explicit system (what Howard Wiarda calls “manifest corporatism”), put into practice under the title of corporatism itself, the twentieth century experience is not encouraging. Corporatism did not end up being an alternative to liberal capitalism or soviet communism (another version of the famous “third way”), but rather became a tool in the hands of authoritarian governments as a way of gaining control over the economic system.1 However, as Wiarda and many other scholars show, in the post-war period corporatism in an implicit form (what he calls “modern neo-corporatism”) has been very much present in Western Europe and the Americas, going under various names such as “tripartite or collective bargaining” and “societal accommodation”, and through many institutions such as development agencies, wages councils and industrial parks. Many forms of incomes and industrial policy rely on a form of corporatism, where the various parties with an interest in the development of a particular industry or economic activity work together, often with local or national government involved, for the regulation and promotion of this sphere of activity. Indeed, after the war one could well have said “Corporatism is Dead – Long live Corporatism (under another name)”.
1 Howard J. Wiarda, Corporatism and Comparative Politics: The Othe Great “Ism”, M. E. Sharpe, Armonk, 1997
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