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Blond: 'The real future is all business becomes social enterprise'
Politicians will only adopt social enterprise as the vision for all business models if there is a groundswell of support from ordinary voters, warned one of David Cameron's key advisors today.
Phillip Blond, the director of social conservative think tank ResPublica and otherwise known as the 'Red Tory', was speaking at Voice10, the national social enterprise conference in Cardiff.
Blond said that he believed that social and environmental principles should be embedded in all business.
But he was challenged by a question from Nigel Lowthrop, founder of environmental social enterprise Hill Holt Wood.
Lowthrop said that at last year's Voice conference Conservative leader David Cameron had 'backed away' from saying he believed that social enterprise was the vision of future business.
Lowthrop asked Blond whether he believed Cameron, if he became prime minister, would support social enterprise as the way for all business to be conducted or whether Cameron would back away from this due to the pressure of big corporates.
Blond answered that Cameron's response would depend on what the voters wanted.
'I think real politics is about voters creating the pre-conditions for politicians to do something different,' he said.
'What we need is bottom up politics, but, by the same token, a really clever politician has to help create the constituency that will support him in the change he wants to see.
'Until we create that constituency for radical politics we will just have the same old, same old.'
Blond said: 'The real future is all business becomes social enterprise.'
To read Social Enterprise's exclusive interview with Phillip Blond in our February issue click here
Comments
Capitalism that works for all
Phillip Blond came up on my radar last year in a Guardian article describing his ideas on capitalism that works for all. This same concept had been delivered 14 years ago, in a critique of Western capitalism and advocacy for 'social enterprise' in a paper for the US President's re-election committee, then published on the web as free to use intellectual property.
I picked up yesterday on a remark he'd made about 'Chicago School' economics which was very relevant to the early work since the first target for inclusive capitalism was Russia, where Harvard had led the catastrophic top down Defense Enterprise Fund.
Suggesting an alternate localised bottom up approach with a community bank, it led to creation of thousands of new businesses, was replicated in other cities and led to the formation of the Russian Microfinance Centre in 2002.
In this interview after launching our profit for social purpose approach in the UK, our founder describes the work in Russia and the paper prescribing an alternate economic paradigm.
http://www.iccrimea.org/scholarly/economicdev.html
Jeff Mowatt
People-Centered Economic Development
p-ced.com
people-centered.net