INTERVIEW
WITH NOBEL LAUREATE MUHAMMAD YUNUS
'Capitalism
Has Degenerated into a Casino' 10/10/2008
Nobel Peace Prize laureate Muhammad Yunus says that
greed has destroyed the world's financial system. SPIEGEL ONLINE spoke with him
about the profit motive, social consciousness and what should be done to end
the financial crisis.
SPIEGEL ONLINE: Mr.
Yunus, for years you have been preaching a more socially conscious way of doing
business and have denounced the narrow focus on maximizing profit as harmful.
Now, the entire financial system is wobbling ...
REUTERS
Muhammad Yunus says that profit should not be the only
reason that businesses exist.
Yunus: The current
turn of events makes me sad. It is certainly not something I am happy about.
The collapse has hurt so many people and has suddenly made the entire world
unstable. We should now be concentrating on making sure that such a financial
crisis does not happen again.
SPIEGEL ONLINE: What should be done?
Yunus: There are huge holes in the current
financial system that need to be plugged. The market is clearly not able to
solve these problems itself, and now people are having to run to the
governments to ask for emergency assistance. That is not a good sign because it
shows that trust in the markets has evaporated. At the moment, there is
unfortunately no other option than for government takeovers and government
support. That is currently the method being used to combat the crisis -- a
method kicked off with the $700 billion bailout package passed in the US. In Germany, the
government has likewise jumped into the fray.
MUHAMMAD
YUNUS
AP
Muhammad Yunus was
born in Chittagong, Bangladesh in 1940. He was the
third of 14 children in the well- off family of
a jeweler. Yunus studied economics in Bangladesh
and in the United States.
He founded Grameen Bank in 1983 to provide microcredit to the poor so they
could start their own small businesses. In 2006, he received the Nobel Peace
Prize in recognition of his bank's achievements.
SPIEGEL ONLINE:
Where exactly do you see the problem with such a strategy?
Yunus: The point is that we have to return
as soon as possible to market mechanisms that can ameliorate the crisis and
solve problems. Solutions should come out of the market and not from
governments.
SPIEGEL ONLINE: But you just said yourself
that the market is not capable of doing so.
Yunus: That is exactly what we need to work
on. For a long time, the main priorities have been the maximization of profits
and rapid growth -- but that focus has led to the current situation. Each day,
we have to look to see if there is potentially harmful growth somewhere. If we
find there is, then we need to react immediately. If something grows
unnaturally quickly, then we have to stop it. Why don’t companies all pay
into a fund that buys up securities that have become too risky? I can even
imagine a business model for such a program.
SPIEGEL ONLINE: On the one hand, you say
that the market has to solve the problem itself, on the other hand, though, you
criticize overly quick growth. That sounds like you think that profit-oriented
capitalism has failed.
Yunus: Not at all. Capitalism, with all its
market mechanisms, has to survive -- there is no question. What I excoriate is
that today there is only one incentive for doing business, and that is the
maximization of profits. But the incentive of doing social good must be
included. There need to be many more companies whose primary aim is not that of
earning the highest profits possible, but that of providing the greatest
benefit possible for human kind.
SPIEGEL ONLINE: And you think that those
two incentives are mutually exclusive? The bank you founded, Grameen Bank --
which led to your receiving the Nobel Peace Prize in 2006 -- both helps people
and earns healthy profits.
Yunus: It is a company which is focused on
the social good and which makes a profit, but it is not focused on maximizing
its profits. I am not interested in turning all profit-oriented companies into
socially conscious operations. They are two different categories of companies
-- there will always be businesses whose primary goal is that of earning as
much money as possible. That is okay. But earning as much money as possible can
only be a means to an end, not an end in itself. One has to invest money in
something meaningful -- and I would make a case for it being something that
improves the quality of life for all people.
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SPIEGEL ONLINE:
What, though, does an increase in the number of socially minded companies have
to do with the financial crisis?
Yunus: Were there more socially minded
companies, people would have more opportunities to shape their own lives. The
markets would be more balanced than they are today.
SPIEGEL ONLINE: You are talking about
saving the world with altruism ...
Yunus: There are many philanthropists in
this world, people who help people by providing them with homes, education,
etc. But that is a one-way street. The money is spent and never comes back.
Were one to invest that money in a socially minded company, it would stay in
the economy and would be much more effective because it would be used according
to the criteria of the market and would thus develop a certain amount of market
leverage.
SPIEGEL ONLINE: Who do you think is guilty
for the current financial meltdown?
Yunus: The market itself with its lack of
adequate regulation. Today's capitalism has degenerated into a casino. The
financial markets are propelled by greed. Speculation has reached catastrophic
proportions. These are all things that have to end.
SPIEGEL ONLINE: The current financial
crisis began as a credit crisis -- homeowners in the US could no longer pay down their
mortgages. At Grameen Bank, which provides microloans, the repayment rate is
close to 100 percent. Do you think your bank could be a model for the entire
finance world?
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Yunus: The
fundamental difference is that our business is very connected to the real
economy. When we provide a loan of $200, that money will go to buy a cow
somewhere. If we lend $100, someone will maybe buy some chickens. In other
words, the money goes to something with concrete value. Finance and the real
economy have to be connected. In the US, the financial system has
completely split off from the real economy. Castles were built in the sky, and
suddenly people realized that these castles don't exist at all. That was the
point at which the financial system collapsed.
SPIEGEL ONLINE: Is it now time for
governments to intervene in the market economy and strengthen regulation?
Yunus: There has to be regulation, but
governments should not be allowed to steer the market. On the other hand, it
has become clear that Adam Smith's "invisible hand" which supposedly
solves all the market's problems doesn't exist. This "invisible hand"
has completely disappeared in the last few days. What we are experiencing is a
dramatic failure of the markets.
Interview conducted by Hasnain Kazim. Translated from the
German by Charles Hawley.
Link:
http://www.spiegel.de/international/business/0,1518,583366,00.html
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