AS PROTESTS against financial power sweep the world this week, science may have confirmed the protesters' worst fears. An analysis of the relationships between 43,000 transnational corporations has identified a relatively small group of companies, mainly banks, with disproportionate power over the global economy.
| The 1318 transnational corporations that form the core of the economy. Superconnected companies are red, very connected companies are yellow. The size of the dot represents revenue |
The study's assumptions have attracted some criticism, but complex systems analysts contacted by New Scientist
say it is a unique effort to untangle control in the global economy.
Pushing the analysis further, they say, could help to identify ways of
making global capitalism more stable.
The idea that a few bankers control a large chunk of the global economy might not seem like news to New York's Occupy Wall Street movement and protesters elsewhere (see photo).
But the study, by a trio of complex systems theorists at the Swiss
Federal Institute of Technology in Zurich, is the first to go beyond
ideology to empirically identify such a network of power. It combines
the mathematics long used to model natural systems with comprehensive
corporate data to map ownership among the world's transnational
corporations (TNCs).
"Reality is so complex, we must move away from dogma, whether it's conspiracy theories or free-market," says James Glattfelder. "Our analysis is reality-based."
Previous studies have found that a few TNCs own
large chunks of the world's economy, but they included only a limited
number of companies and omitted indirect ownerships, so could not say
how this affected the global economy - whether it made it more or less
stable, for instance.
The Zurich team can. From Orbis 2007,
a database listing 37 million companies and investors worldwide, they
pulled out all 43,060 TNCs and the share ownerships linking them. Then
they constructed a model of which companies controlled others through
shareholding networks, coupled with each company's operating revenues,
to map the structure of economic power.
The work, to be published in PLoS One,
revealed a core of 1318 companies with interlocking ownerships (see
image). Each of the 1318 had ties to two or more other companies, and on
average they were connected to 20. What's more, although they
represented 20 per cent of global operating revenues, the 1318 appeared
to collectively own through their shares the majority of the world's
large blue chip and manufacturing firms - the "real" economy -
representing a further 60 per cent of global revenues.
When the team further untangled the web of
ownership, it found much of it tracked back to a "super-entity" of 147
even more tightly knit companies - all of their ownership was held by
other members of the super-entity - that controlled 40 per cent of the
total wealth in the network. "In effect, less than 1 per cent of the
companies were able to control 40 per cent of the entire network," says
Glattfelder. Most were financial institutions. The top 20 included
Barclays Bank, JPMorgan Chase & Co, and The Goldman Sachs Group.
John Driffill
of the University of London, a macroeconomics expert, says the value of
the analysis is not just to see if a small number of people controls
the global economy, but rather its insights into economic stability.
Concentration of power is not good or bad
in itself, says the Zurich team, but the core's tight interconnections
could be. As the world learned in 2008, such networks are unstable. "If one [company] suffers distress," says Glattfelder, "this propagates."
"It's disconcerting to see how connected
things really are," agrees George Sugihara of the Scripps Institution of
Oceanography in La Jolla, California, a complex systems expert who has
advised Deutsche Bank.
Yaneer Bar-Yam, head of the New England
Complex Systems Institute (NECSI), warns that the analysis assumes
ownership equates to control, which is not always true. Most company
shares are held by fund managers who may or may not control what the
companies they part-own actually do. The impact of this on the system's
behaviour, he says, requires more analysis.
Crucially, by identifying the architecture
of global economic power, the analysis could help make it more stable.
By finding the vulnerable aspects of the system, economists can suggest
measures to prevent future collapses spreading through the entire
economy. Glattfelder says we may need global anti-trust rules, which now
exist only at national level, to limit over-connection among TNCs.
Sugihara says the analysis suggests one possible solution: firms should
be taxed for excess interconnectivity to discourage this risk.
One thing won't chime with some of the
protesters' claims: the super-entity is unlikely to be the intentional
result of a conspiracy to rule the world. "Such structures are common in
nature," says Sugihara.
Newcomers to any network connect
preferentially to highly connected members. TNCs buy shares in each
other for business reasons, not for world domination. If connectedness
clusters, so does wealth, says Dan Braha of NECSI: in similar models,
money flows towards the most highly connected members. The Zurich study,
says Sugihara, "is strong evidence that simple rules governing TNCs
give rise spontaneously to highly connected groups". Or as Braha puts
it: "The Occupy Wall Street claim that 1 per cent of people have most of
the wealth reflects a logical phase of the self-organising economy."
So, the super-entity may not result from
conspiracy. The real question, says the Zurich team, is whether it can
exert concerted political power. Driffill feels 147 is too many to
sustain collusion. Braha suspects they will compete in the market but
act together on common interests. Resisting changes to the network
structure may be one such common interest.
When this article was first posted, the
comment in the final sentence of the paragraph beginning "Crucially, by
identifying the architecture of global economic power…" was
misattributed.
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