Global Ethics Corner: Choosing between Markets, Regulation, and Rewards

Jan 16, 2009

How can we resolve the financial melt-down and prevent another? Solutions focus on free markets, regulation, or rewards. Perhaps we should balance all three? How?

How can we resolve the financial melt-down and prevent another? Solutions focus on free markets, regulation, or rewards.

Markets are supposed to self-regulate through negative feedback, yet deregulated markets can swell into overvalued bubbles.

Regulation can prevent bubbles, but perhaps at the expense of dynamism, creativity and choice. Unfortunately, regulation also usually favors one player, sometimes correcting abuses while simultaneously triggering future time-bombs.

Rewards can work as well as rules. Harvard's John Ruggie suggests that a more ethical capitalism might emerge, not by instilling ethics in people, but by creating incentives based on ethical frameworks. Individual ethics alone can't balance an incentive structure that encourages excess and irresponsible risk-taking.

What do you think?

Should we let markets work with minimum intervention because the dangers of regulation, while different, are just as great?

Should we regulate more strictly, knowing we are favoring some and creating future problems?

Should we create reward structures that pay people for good behavior? Is this even possible in a highly materialistic and commercial society?

Perhaps we should balance all three? But how?

By William Vocke

To post a comment, go to the Global Ethics Corner slideshow.

You may also like

MAY 6, 2022 Podcast

For Companies, Could China Be the Next Russia? with Perth Tolle

Isaac Stone Fish and finance expert Perth Tolle discuss the global economic backlash to Russia after the Ukraine invasion, China, and much more.

CREDIT: Abobe/hamara.

SEP 25, 2024 Article

Politico Op-Ed: Walking a Fraying Nuclear Tightrope

In a new op-ed, Carnegie Council President Joel Rosenthal argues that a recommitment to nuclear arms control is nothing short of a moral imperative.

Left to Right: Eddie Mandhry, Abiodun Williams, Joel Rosenthal. CREDIT: Juhi Desai.

JUL 23, 2024 Video

Global Leadership in a Turbulent Time: A Conversation with Professor Abiodun Williams

In this roundtable discussion, Tufts University's Professor Abiodun Williams speaks about the essential leadership traits needed to drive institutional change.

Not translated

This content has not yet been translated into your language. You can request a translation by clicking the button below.

Request Translation