Nearly two years after the financial meltdown, economic recovery still seems a
distant promise. Desperate, overwhelming need for change has not overcome Washington’s
timid preference for the status quo. Joblessness and foreclosures remain endemic, and each
day brings scandalous new revelations of outrageous Wall Street bonuses and corruption.
Issued as a report of the New Economy Working group, this substantially
updated and expanded new edition of Agenda for a New Economy is a call for a national
Declaration of Independence from Wall Street.
What is needed, Korten argues, is a system that favors life values over
financial values, roots power in people and community, and supports local resilience and
self-organization within a framework of living markets and democracy. The new edition is a
handbook for a nonviolent Main Street revolution – because change, as he explains, will
not come from above. It will come from below.
The root of the problem, as detailed extensively in the first edition of Agenda
for a New Economy, remains what it was in 2008: Wall Street institutions that have
perfected the art of creating “phantom wealth”—mere numbers on paper—without
producing anything of real value and without any thought of the social consequences. In
the new edition, Korten examines how events since September 2008 have proven that the
predatory Wall Street leopard cannot change its spots and explains why a visionary new
president opted for marginal reform. He fleshes out his vision of the alternative to the
corporate Wall Street economy: a Main Street economy based on locally owned,
community-oriented “living enterprises” whose success is measured as much by their
positive impact on people and the environment as by their positive balance sheets. Most
importantly, he offers a groundbreaking plan as to what we as citizens can do to break
through the political paralysis and replace the phantom-wealth Wall Street system with a
living-wealth Main Street system that is responsive to the needs and values of ordinary
people.
Table of Contents
Acknowledgments xi
Prologue A Question of Values 1
Part I The Case for a New Economy 13
1 Looking Upstream 15
2 Modern Alchemists and the Sport of Moneymaking 26
3 A Real-Market Alternative 43
4 More Than Tinkering at the Margins 55
Part II The Case for Replacing Wall Street 65
5 What Wall Street Really Wants 67
6 Buccaneers and Privateers 80
7 The High Cost of Phantom Wealth 88
8 The End of Empire 101
9 Greed Is Not a Virtue; Sharing Is Not a Sin 113
Part III A Living-Economy Vision 125
10 What People Really Want 127
11 At Home on a Living Earth 138
12 New Vision, New Priorities 151
Part IV A Living-Economy Agenda 165
13 Seven Points of Intervention 167
14 What About My . . . ? 186
15 A Presidential Declaration of Independence from Wall Street I Hope I May One Day
Hear 206
Part V Navigating Uncharted Waters 219
16 When the People Lead, the Leaders Will Follow 222
17 A Visionary President Meets Realpolitik 233
18 Change the Story, Change the Future 245
19 Learning to Live, Living to Learn 258
Epilogue: The View From 2084 274
Notes 285
Index 297
About the Author 309
310 pages, Paperback