a-new-approch-to-capitalism

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. . . . 6. A New Approach to CapitalismWilliam Henry Bill Gates III (born October 28, 1955) is an American business magnate, philanthropist, author, and is chairman of Microsoft, the software company he founded with Paul Allen. He is consistently ranked among the worlds wealthiest peopleand was the wealthiest overall from 1995 to 2009, excluding 2008, when he was ranked third.During his career at Microsoft, Gates held the positions of CEO and chief software architect, and remains the largest individual shareholder, with more than 8 percent of the common stock. Gates is one of the best-known entrepreneurs of the personal computer revolution. Although he is admired by many, a number of industry insiders criticize his business tactics, which they consider anti-competitive, an opinion which has in some cases been upheld by the courtsIn the later stages of his career, Gates has pursued a number of philanthropic endeavors, donating large amounts of money to various charitable organizations and scientific research programs through the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, established in 2000.A New Approach to Capitalism in the 21st CenturyBill Gates: World Economic Forum 2008Remarks by Bill Gates, Chairman, Microsoft CorporationWorld Economic Forum 2008Davos, SwitzerlandJan. 24, 2008KLAUS SCHWAB: Good evening, ladies and gentlemen. If in the 22nd century a book will be written about the entrepreneur of the 21st century, Im sure - or even of the 20th century - Im sure that the person who will foremost come to the mind of those historians is certainly Bill Gates. (Applause.)I dont have to introduce Bill Gates here. I just want to mention when about eight weeks ago we had a phone conversation, and we talked about this session, and we talked about the length, and, of course, in the Davos tradition I said 10 minutes. So, Bill Gates said, No, I want to make the most important speech which I will deliver this year. And I asked him what is the subject, and he said, I want to talk about the role of the corporation in society. And since, of course, this subject is at the core of what the World Economic Forum is doing, I said, yes, of course, you have at least 30 minutes, and thats what he has now. Bill, the floor is yours. (Applause.)BILL GATES: Well, thank you for that kind introduction and for the privilege of speaking to this forum. As you all may know, in July Ill make a big career change. Im not worried; I believe Im still marketable. (Laughter.) Im a self-starter, Im proficient in Microsoft Office. (Laughter.) I guess thats it. (Laughter.) Also Im learning how to give money away.So, this is the last time Ill attend Davos as a full-time employee of Microsoft.Some of us are lucky enough to arrive at moments in life when we can pause, reflect on our work, and say: This is great. Its fun, exciting, and useful; I could do this forever.But the passing of time forces each of us to take stock and ask: What have I accomplished so far? What do I still want to accomplish? Thirty years ago, 20 years ago, 10 years ago, my focus was totally on how the magic of software could change the world. I saw that breakthroughs in technology could solve key problems. And they do, increasingly, for billions of people. But breakthroughs change lives primarily where people can afford to buy them, only where there is economic demand, and economic demand is not the same as economic need.There are billions of people who need the great inventions of the computer age, and many more basic needs as well, but they have no way of expressing their needs in ways that matter to the market, so they go without. If we are going to have a chance of changing their lives, we need another level of innovation. Not just technology innovation, we need system innovation, and thats what I want to discuss with you here in Davos today. Let me begin by expressing a view that some do not share: The world is getting better, a lot better. In significant and far-reaching ways, the world is a better place to live than it has ever been. Consider the status of women and minorities in society - virtually any society - compared to any time in the past. Consider that life expectancy has nearly doubled during the last 100 years.Consider governance, the number of people today who vote in elections, express their views, and enjoy economic freedom compared to any time in the past. In many crucial areas, the world is getting better.These improvements have been triggered by advances in science, technology, and medicine. They have brought us to a high point in human welfare. Were really just at the becoming of this technology-driven revolution in what people can do for one another. In the coming decades, well have astonishing new abilities: better software, better diagnosis for illness, better cures, better education, better opportunities and more brilliant minds coming up with ideas that solve tough problems. This is how I see the world, and it should make one thing clear: I am an optimist. But I am an impatient optimist. The world is getting better, but its not getting better fast enough, and its not getting better for everyone. The great advances in the world have often aggravated the inequities in the world. The least needy see the most improvement, and the most needy get the least - in particular the billion people who live on less than a dollar a day. There are roughly a billion people in the world who dont get enough food, who dont have clean drinking water, who dont have electricity, the things that we take for granted. Diseases like malaria that kill over a million people a year get far less attention than drugs to help with baldness.So, the bottom billion misses the benefits of the global economy, and yet theyll suffer from the negative effects of economic growth they missed out on. Climate change will have the biggest effect on people who have done the least to cause it. Why do people benefit in inverse proportion to their need? Well, market incentives make that happen. In a system of capitalism, as peoples wealth rises, the financial incentive to serve them rises. As their wealth falls, the financial incentive to serve them falls, until it becomes zero. We have to find a way to make the aspects of capitalism that serve wealthier people serve poorer people as well. The genius of capitalism lies in its ability to make self-interest serve the wider interest. The potential of a big financial return for innovation unleashes a broad set of talented people in pursuit of many different discoveries. This system, driven by self-interest, is responsible for the incredible innovations that have improved so many lives. But to harness this power so it benefits everyone, we need to refine the system.As I see it, there are two great forces of human nature: self-interest, and caring for others. Capitalism harnesses self-interest in a helpful and sustainable way, but only on behalf of those who can pay. Government aid and philanthropy channel our caring for those who cant pay. But to provide rapid improvement for the poor we need a system that draws in innovators and businesses in a far better way than we do today.Such a system would have a twin mission: making profits and also improving lives of those who dont fully benefit from todays market forces. For sustainability we need to use profit incentives wherever we can. At the same time, profits are not always possible when business tries to serve the very poor. In such cases there needs to be another incentive, and that incentive is recognition. Recognition enhances a companys reputation and appeals to customers; above all, it attracts good people to an organization. As such, recognition triggers a market-based reward for good behavior. In markets where profits are not possible, recognition is a proxy; where profits are possible, recognition is an added incentive. This weeks Economist had a section on corporate responsibility, and it put the problem very nicely. It said its the interaction between a companys principles and its commercial competence that shape the kind of business it will be.The challenge here is to design a system where market incentives, including profits and recognition, drive those principles to do more for the poor. I like to call this idea creative capitalism, an approach where governments, businesses, and nonprofits work together to stretch the reach of market forces so that more people can make a profit, or gain recognition, doing work that eases the worlds inequities. Some people might object to this kind of market-based social change, arguing that if we combine sentiment with self-interest, we will not expand the reach of the market, but reduce it. Yet Adam Smith, the very father of capitalism and the author of “Wealth of Nations,” who believed strongly in the value of self-interest for society, opened his first book with the following lines: How selfish soever man may be supposed, there are evidently some principles in his nature, which interest him in the fortunes of others, and render their happiness necessary to him, though he derives nothing from it, except the pleasure of seeing it.Creative capitalism takes this interest in the fortunes of others and ties it to our interest in our own fortunes in ways that help advance both. This hybrid engine of self-interest and concern for others can serve a much wider circle of people than can be reached by self-interest or caring alone. My thinking on this subject has been influenced by many different experiences, including the work Microsoft does to address inequity. For the past 20 years, Microsoft has used corporate philanthropy as a way to bring technology to people who dont have access. Weve donated more than US$3 billion in cash and software to try to bridge the digital divide. But our greatest impact is not just free or inexpensive software by itself, but rather when we show how to use technology to create solutions. And were committed to bring more of that expertise to the table. Our product and business groups throughout the world, and some of our very best minds in our research lab, including a special focus in our research lab in India, are working on new products, technologies, and business models that can make computing more accessible and more affordable. In one case, were developing an interface that will enable illiterate or semi-literate people to use a PC instantly, with minimal training or assistance. In another were looking at how wireless, together with software, can avoid the expensive connectivity costs that far more than the cost of software or hardware is what stands in the way of computing access in rural areas. Were thinking in a much more focused way about the problems that the poorest people face, and giving our most innovative thinkers the time and resources to come up with solutions. This kind of creative capitalism matches business expertise with needs in the developing world to find markets that are already there, but are untapped. Sometimes market forces fail to make an impact in developing countries not because theres no demand, or even because money is lacking, but because we dont spend enough time studying the needs and requirements of that market. This point was made eloquently in CK Prahalads book, “The Fortune at the Bottom of the Pyramid,” and thats had a huge influence on companies in terms of stretching the profit motive through special innovation.An example of this is when the World Health Organization tried to expand vaccination for meningitis in Africa, it didnt go straight to a vaccine manufacturer. It first went to Africa to learn what people could pay. They found out that if they wanted mothers to get this vaccine for their babies, it had to be priced at under 50 cents a dose. Then they challenged the partners to meet this price, and, in fact, Serum Institute in India found a new way to make the vaccine for 40 cents each. It agreed to then supply 250 million doses to distribute through public health systems over the next decade, allowing it to also sell into the private sector. In another case, a Dutch company, which holds the rights to a cholera vaccine, retained the rights for the developed world, but shared those rights, with no royalty, with manufacturers in developing countries. The result is a cholera vaccine made in Vietnam that costs less than $1 a dose, and that includes delivery and the costs of the overall immunization campaign. Because many of todays advanced products have low marginal costs, whether its software or medicines or media, so many things, this idea of tiered pricing to offer valuable goods for the poor in a way they can afford it, can be used more broadly than ever before.These projects I think provide a hint of what we can accomplish if people who are experts on needs in the developing world meet with scientists who understand what the breakthroughs are, whether its in software or drugs. Together they can help find poor world applications for the very best ideas.Another approach to creative capitalism includes a direct role for governments. Of course, governments already do a great deal to help the poor in ways that go far beyond just nurturing markets: They fund aid research, healthcare; theyve done great things. But I believe the highest-leverage work that governments can do is to set policy to create market incentives for business activity that improves the lives of the poor.Under a United States law, recently signed by President Bush, any drug company that develops a new treatment for a neglected disease like malaria or TB can get a priority review from the FDA for another product theyve made. If you develop a new drug for malaria, your profitable say cholesterol-lowering drug could go on the market up to a year earlier. This priority review could be worth hundreds of millions of dollars. Another approach to creative capitalism is simply to help the businesses in the poor world reach markets in the rich world. Tomorrow morning Ill announce a partnership that gives African farmers access to the premium coffee market, with the goal of doubling their income from coffee crops. This project will help African farmers produce high-quality coffee and connect them to companies that want to buy it. That will help lift them and their families out of poverty. Finally, one of the most inventive forms of creative capitalism involves someone we all know very well. A few years ago, I was sitting in a bar here in Davos with Bono. Late at night, after a few drinks, he was on fire, talking about how we could get a percentage of each purchase from civic-minded companies to help change the world. He kept calling people, waking them up, and handing me the phone to show me the interest. Well, its taken time to get this going, but he was right. If you give people a chance to associate themselves with a cause they care about, while buying a great product, they will. That was how the RED Campaign was born, here in Davos. RED products are available from companies like Gap, Motorola, and Armani. Just this week, Dell and Microsoft joined the cause. Over the last year and a half, RED has generated $50 million for the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, tuberculosis, and Malaria. As a result, nearly 2 million people in Africa are receiving life-saving drugs today. There is a growing understanding around the world that when change is driven by proper incentives, you have a sustainable plan for change, because profits and recognition are renewable resources. Klaus Schwab runs a foundation that assists social entrepreneurs around the world, men and women who turn their ideas for improving lives into affordable goods or services. President Clinton demonstrated the unique role that a non-profit can play as a deal-maker between rich world producers and poor world consumers. The magazine Fast Company gives awards for what they call Social Capitalism.These are just a few examples of where the interest in these activities is growing. This is a world-wide movement, and we all have the ability and the responsibility to accelerate it. Id like to ask everyone here, whether youre in business, government or the non-profit world, to take on a project of creative capitalism in the coming year, and see where you can stretch the reach of market forces to help push things forward. Whether its foreign aid or charitable gifts or new products, can you find a way to apply this so that the power of the marketplace helps the poor? I hope corporations will dedicate a percentage of their top innovators time to issues that could help people left out of the global economy. This kind of contribution is even more powerful than giving cash or offering employees time off to volunteer. It is a focused use of what your company does best. It is a great form of creative capitalism, because it takes the brainpower and makes life better for the richest, and dedicates some of it to improving the lives of everyone else. There are a number of pharmaceutical companies, like GlaxoSmithKline, that are already putting their top innovators to work on new approaches to help the poor. Another example is Sumitomo Chemical, who used its expertise to build a bed net factory that it donated. Other companies are doing the same - in food, technology, cell phones, banking. In fact, I would say that if other companies in a sector simply matched what the leader in that sector is doing, we would make a dramatic impact against the worlds inequities. Finally, I hope that the great thinkers here will dedicate some time to finding ways for businesses, governments, NGOs, and the media to create measures of what companies are doing to use their power and intelligence to serve a wider circle of people. This kind of information is an important element of creative capitalism. It can turn good works into recognition, and ensure that recognition bridges market-based rewards to businesses that do the most work to serve the most people. We are living in a phenomenal age. If we can spend the early decades of the 21st century finding approaches that meet the needs of the poor in ways that generate profits and recognition for business, we will have found a sustainable way to reduce poverty in the world. The task is open-ended. It will never be finished. But a passionate effort to answer this challenge will help change the world. Im excited to be part of it.Thank you. (Applause.)KLAUS SCHWAB: Thank you, Bill.Lets make Davos the starting point of a movement of creative capitalism. Now, so I have one or two questions, being very much involved into this issue intellectually. When you preach creative capitalism or I call it sometimes corporate global citizenship, you meet very often quite some cynicism of people, people saying thats the end, I mean, you have enough arguments, the business of business is business.Here what would you - you mentioned already its a reputation, its a recognition, but what would you tell those people to go away with this wrong criticism?BILL GATES: Well, I think that part of the problem we get into is that there are many things that are done under this label that, in fact, dont have a very large impact, and so we have to use the fact that more is going on here, and people are getting more sophisticated about it, as well as the Internet, to really gauge which are the sincere efforts that have a bit impact. So, some of the cynicism about this will be reduced as it is mapped sector by sector into more concrete activities.We also benefit immensely that some of these breakthroughs, it doesnt take much of a change in them to make them available to the poorest. Even sometimes eventually the price just comes down, and there is t
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