Today’s podcast is an essay by Louis Kelso and Patricia Hetter Kelso in which the Kelsos conclude that reimagining capital finance—not charity—can break poverty cycles while preserving democratic ideals. Their plan leverages market tools to broaden ownership, arguing that “industrial power to produce” must align with “economic power to consume” for sustainable development. The authors propose financing industrialization via future savings instead of past capital accumulation.
The audio-visual presentation was created in “Descript”, using an AI-generated voice for narration. Visit CESJ.org for more information.
CLICK ON THE LINKS, NOT THE PHOTO
You must click on the link below to get to the video, not on the photo.
Uprooting World Poverty: A Job for Business
(The links right above are what you’re supposed to click on.)
And if you want the playlists for previous videos:
Economic Personalism (The Book)
Economic Personalism v. The Great Reset
Socialism, Modernism and the New Age
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