Copyright@kamleshsujata1
Posted by Kamlesh Tripathi
Posted by Kamlesh Tripathi
CONSCIOUS CAPITALISM AND SPIRITUAL WISDOM
Is there a
better way of distributing the wealth of the world than it being concentrated
in few hands. And, should companies merely work for profits or should profits
be a derived outcome of their pursuit of spiritual wisdom through the route of
business?
CONSCIOUS
CAPITALISM AND SPIRITUAL WISDOM
By Anant G
Nadkarni
British
author and journalist Michael Smith wrote in ‘Beyond the Bottom Line’, in 2001,
that 51 of 100 top revenue-generating institutions were business corporations
and not nation-states. And the then world’s three richest people owned personal
wealth greater than the GDP of 34 poorest nations. Smith’s new book ‘Great
Company’, published in 2015, updates that 80 richest people own more wealth than
what is owned by one-half of the human race and very soon just 1% people will
own wealth which equals what the rest 99% of us would have. Could the
collective wisdom of business, governments, regulators, investors, leaders and
people of all types bring about better distributive justice?
Rubert
Eccles, professor of strategy and Business at Harward Business School, in his
book ‘Integrated Reporting Movement’ on corporate sustainability says, “The
spirit of Ubuntu, an African values system, was suggested as a natural
foundation for effective corporate governance.” Simply put it means something
like, ‘I am because you are, you are because we are.” The authors keep
stressing on ‘integrated thinking’ as being more critical than integrated
reporting.
Cindy Wigglesworth in her book ‘SQ21: the Twenty-one
Skills of Spiritual Intelligence’ defines spiritual intelligence in a
faith-friendly and faith-neutral way as: “The ability to behave with
wisdom and compassion, while maintaining inner and outer peace, regardless
of the situation.” it shows up as our ‘best of head and heart’ every
moment, every day and with equanimity under all real-life or work
circumstances. While appreciating the diversity in leadership profiles,
spiritual intelligence is not only another type of intelligence among many, but
“it also becomes a source of guidance and direction of the other dimensions of
fully developing human potential”.
In a process
of broadly four clusters-knowing oneself better; knowing the world from a new
position; by working hard on self-mastery; and developing social-mastery- it
helps to create a spiritually resonant culture. There are 21 skills and methods
that form an assessment and measuring process for leadership development.
Spiritual intelligence can be acquired and it actually works. It is practised
by business leaders like John Mackey, co-CEO of the $11billion company Whole
Foods Market that runs 340 stores with a 70,000 team. Mackey has not only
produced a famous book ‘Conscious Capitalism’ but admits that this process
pulls together analytical, emotional systems and other aspects of thinking to
generate a more conscious leader.
Mackey says that
the view of conscious capitalism is therefore quite contrary to what
Friedman held about the ‘business of business’ just being running it well.
Mackey asserts, “We want to improve the health and well-being of everyone on
this planet through high quality foods and we can’t fulfill this mission unless
we are highly profitable … Just as people cannot live without eating, business
cannot live without profits. But most people don’t live to eat, and neither
must businesses live just to make profits.”
The critical
point of convergence comes in when Mackey focusses on helping everyone create
greater meaning and purpose- which resonates with the core principle of
spiritual intelligence which is to cultivate the practice of reaching beyond
oneself. Ratan Tata, as chairman of Tata Sons, while commenting on Mackey’s
book said, “Businesses need to be driven by a purpose higher than maximizing
profit, and they must ensure optimizing benefits to all stakeholders. Only if
that happens, can capitalism deliver to all humanity the full societal benefits
it is capable of. “The purpose of Conscious Capitalism or Integrated Thinking
could perhaps be realised only when an overarching facet of
spiritual-leadership guides.
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