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Book Description

Corporations have a huge influence on the life of every citizen—this book offers a visionary but practical plan to give every citizen a say in how corporations are run while also gaining some supplemental income. It lays out a clear approach that uses the mechanisms of the private market to hold corporations accountable to the public.

This would happen through the creation of what the authors call the Universal Fund, a kind of national, democratic, mega mutual fund. Every American over eighteen would be entitled to a share and would participate in directing its share voting choices. Corporations and wealthy individuals would donate stocks, bonds, cash, or other assets to the fund just like they do to other philanthropic ventures now. The fund would pay out dividends to its citizen-shareholders that would grow as the fund grows.

The Universal Fund is undoubtedly a big idea, but it is also eminently practical: it uses the tools of capitalism, not government, to give all citizens a direct influence on corporate actions. It would be a major institutional investor beholden not to a small elite group of stockholders pushing for short-term gain but to everyone. The fund would reward corporations that made sure their actions didn't harm people, communities, and the environment, and it would enable them to invest in innovations that would take more than a few months to pay off. Which is another reason corporations would donate to the fund—they could be freed from the constant pressure to maximize their quarterly share price and would essentially be subsidized for doing good.

The authors demonstrate that our current economic rules force corporations to be shortsighted and even destructive because for most large investors, nothing matters but share price. The Universal Fund is designed to be a powerful positive balancing force, making the world a better place and the United States a better nation.

Table of Contents

  1. Cover
  2. Title Page
  3. Copyright Page
  4. Dedication
  5. Contents
  6. Preface
  7. Introduction: What If?
  8. Chapter 1: Lost Opportunity
  9. Chapter 2: Short-Termism and Corporate Governance
  10. Chapter 3: Introducing the Universal Fund
  11. Chapter 4: The Private Money Is There
  12. Chapter 5: How Citizen Capitalism Unleashes Corporations’ Positive Power
  13. Chapter 6: How Citizen Capitalism Embraces Capitalist Principles
  14. Chapter 7: How Citizen Capitalism Mirrors American Values
  15. Chapter 8: How Citizen Capitalism Promotes Equality
  16. Chapter 9: How Citizen Capitalism Compares to Other Proposals
  17. Chapter 10: Why Not?
  18. Conclusion: What Next?
  19. Notes
  20. Acknowledgments
  21. Index
  22. About the Authors
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