When Corporations Rule the World expounds on how economic globalization has focused the influence to manage global organizations and economic markets and disconnect them from responsibility to the social interest of individuals. The novel notates the overwhelming human and conservational values of the struggles of these establishments to renovate morals and foundations universally to assist their own businesses. It also exposes how and why millions of individuals are acting to retrieve their civil and financial authority from this discriminatory potency and offers a plan for reestablishing fairness and delving economic influence in the general public and communities. The book outlines the damage that corporations have caused universally to our economic system, and the complexities of the structuring issues in corporate organizations.
The book gives a wide-ranging analysis that with the unlimited growth of global corporate power, a new corporate colonialism resulting in the loss of national control, trade and industry …show more content…
He explains that cowboys lived in societies where resources were plentiful, and there were job opportunities, and persons competed for individual self-gain. Whereas the astronauts survived with a restricted supply of resources, and everyone made sure that they had the interests of the entire crew in all the decisions they made, as they knew it would not only affect themselves but everyone in their environment. Today most societies are very similar to the cowboy economics. We still treat nature’s bounty and waste –disposal services as free for taking; we honor the strong and equate progress with never-ending increases in rates of our consumption. (Korten 34) As we evolve from the open frontier to a spaceship world we must come to terms that we depend on all aspects of the world, and we have to adjust from living like cowboys to