Paul Tudor Jones II: Why we need to rethink capitalism

312,940 views ・ 2015-04-16

TED


Please double-click on the English subtitles below to play the video.

00:13
This is a story about capitalism.
0
13640
3139
00:16
It's a system I love
1
16779
1788
00:18
because of the successes and opportunities it's afforded me and millions of others.
2
18567
4724
00:23
I started in my 20s trading commodities, cotton in particular, in the pits,
3
23791
6265
00:30
and if there was ever a free market free-for-all, this was it,
4
30056
3626
00:33
where men wearing ties but acting like gladiators
5
33682
3618
00:37
fought literally and physically for a profit.
6
37300
3487
00:41
Fortunately, I was good enough that by the time I was 30,
7
41437
2923
00:44
I was able to move into the upstairs world of money management,
8
44360
3660
00:48
where I spent the next three decades as a global macro trader.
9
48020
3552
00:51
And over that time, I've seen a lot of crazy things in the markets,
10
51572
3274
00:54
and I've traded a lot of crazy manias.
11
54846
4683
00:59
And unfortunately,
12
59529
2109
01:01
I'm sad to report that right now we might be in the grips
13
61638
3300
01:04
of one of the most disastrous, certainly of my career,
14
64938
3956
01:08
and one consistent takeaway is manias never end well.
15
68894
3221
01:12
Now, over the past 50 years,
16
72775
2806
01:15
we as a society have come to view our companies and corporations
17
75581
5851
01:21
in a very narrow, almost monomaniacal fashion
18
81432
4806
01:26
with regard to how we value them,
19
86988
3267
01:30
and we have put so much emphasis on profits,
20
90255
3669
01:33
on short-term quarterly earnings and share prices,
21
93924
2786
01:36
at the exclusion of all else.
22
96710
2840
01:39
It's like we've ripped the humanity out of our companies.
23
99550
4769
01:44
Now, we don't do that -- conveniently reduce something
24
104319
3994
01:48
to a set of numbers that you can play with like Lego toys --
25
108313
3208
01:51
we don't do that in our individual life.
26
111521
2348
01:53
We don't treat somebody or value them
27
113869
3203
01:57
based on their monthly income or their credit score,
28
117072
4141
02:01
but we have this double standard
29
121213
1807
02:03
when it comes to the way that we value our businesses,
30
123020
2545
02:05
and you know what?
31
125565
1485
02:07
It's threatening the very underpinnings of our society.
32
127050
3165
02:10
And here's how you'll see.
33
130215
1602
02:11
This chart is corporate profit margins going back 40 years
34
131817
4505
02:16
as a percentage of revenues,
35
136322
2078
02:18
and you can see that we're at a 40-year high of 12.5 percent.
36
138400
4307
02:22
Now, hooray if you're a shareholder,
37
142707
3552
02:26
but if you're the other side of that, and you're the average American worker,
38
146259
4267
02:30
then you can see it's not such a good thing.
39
150526
3307
02:33
["U.S. Share of Income Going to Labor vs. CEO-to-Worker Compensation Ratio"]
40
153833
3577
02:37
Now, higher profit margins do not increase societal wealth.
41
157410
3117
02:40
What they actually do is they exacerbate income inequality,
42
160527
5239
02:45
and that's not a good thing.
43
165766
2400
02:48
But intuitively, that makes sense, right?
44
168166
2461
02:50
Because if the top 10 percent of American families
45
170627
3623
02:54
own 90 percent of the stocks,
46
174250
2360
02:56
as they take a greater share of corporate profits,
47
176610
2961
02:59
then there's less wealth left for the rest of society.
48
179571
3943
03:03
Again, income inequality is not a good thing.
49
183514
2786
03:06
This next chart, made by The Equality Trust,
50
186300
2461
03:08
shows 21 countries from Austria to Japan to New Zealand.
51
188761
4853
03:13
On the horizontal axis is income inequality.
52
193614
3204
03:16
The further to the right you go, the greater the income inequality.
53
196818
3298
03:20
On the vertical axis are nine social and health metrics.
54
200116
3343
03:23
The more you go up that, the worse the problems are,
55
203459
2763
03:26
and those metrics include life expectancy, teenage pregnancy, literacy,
56
206222
5248
03:31
social mobility, just to name a few.
57
211470
2740
03:34
Now, those of you in the audience who are Americans may wonder,
58
214210
3181
03:37
well, where does the United States rank?
59
217391
2345
03:39
Where does it lie on that chart?
60
219736
1857
03:41
And guess what?
61
221593
1695
03:43
We're literally off the chart.
62
223288
2082
03:45
Yes, that's us,
63
225970
1823
03:47
with the greatest income inequality
64
227793
2159
03:49
and the greatest social problems, according to those metrics.
65
229952
4296
03:54
Now, here's a macro forecast that's easy to make,
66
234248
2554
03:56
and that's, that gap between the wealthiest and the poorest,
67
236802
3599
04:00
it will get closed.
68
240401
2020
04:02
History always does it.
69
242421
1589
04:04
It typically happens in one of three ways:
70
244010
2149
04:06
either through revolution, higher taxes, or wars.
71
246159
6401
04:12
None of those are on my bucket list.
72
252560
2329
04:14
(Laughter)
73
254889
1136
04:16
Now, there's another way to do it,
74
256025
2061
04:18
and that's by increasing justness in corporate behavior,
75
258086
4140
04:22
but the way that we're operating right now,
76
262226
2763
04:24
that would require a tremendous change in behavior,
77
264989
3994
04:28
and like an addict trying to kick a habit,
78
268983
3947
04:32
the first step is to acknowledge that you have a problem.
79
272930
3506
04:36
And let me just say, this profits mania that we're on
80
276436
3901
04:40
is so deeply entrenched
81
280337
2299
04:42
that we don't even realize how we're harming society.
82
282636
2531
04:45
Here's a small but startling example of exactly how we're doing that:
83
285167
4017
04:49
this chart shows corporate giving
84
289184
3063
04:52
as a percentage of profits, not revenues, over the last 30 years.
85
292247
5385
04:57
Juxtapose that to the earlier chart of corporate profit margins,
86
297632
5769
05:03
and I ask you, does that feel right?
87
303401
4127
05:08
In all fairness, when I started writing this, I thought,
88
308758
2941
05:11
"Oh wow, what does my company, what does Tudor do?"
89
311699
2461
05:14
And I realized we give one percent of corporate profits
90
314160
5533
05:19
to charity every year.
91
319693
1730
05:21
And I'm supposed to be a philanthropist.
92
321423
3901
05:25
When I realized that, I literally wanted to throw up.
93
325324
6299
05:31
But the point is, this mania is so deeply entrenched
94
331623
2478
05:34
that well-intentioned people like myself don't even realize that we're part of it.
95
334101
5162
05:39
Now, we're not going to change corporate behavior
96
339943
2331
05:42
by simply increasing corporate philanthropy or charitable contributions.
97
342274
5317
05:47
And oh, by the way, we've since quadrupled that,
98
347591
3134
05:50
but -- (Applause) -- Please.
99
350725
4249
05:54
But we can do it by driving more just behavior.
100
354974
3739
05:58
And one way to do it is actually trusting
101
358713
3041
06:01
the system that got us here in the first place,
102
361754
2415
06:04
and that's the free market system.
103
364169
2113
06:06
About a year ago, some friends of mine and I
104
366282
2693
06:08
started a not-for-profit called Just Capital.
105
368975
3050
06:12
Its mission is very simple:
106
372025
1468
06:13
to help companies and corporations
107
373493
2495
06:15
learn how to operate in a more just fashion by using the public's input
108
375988
5275
06:21
to define exactly what the criteria are for just corporate behavior.
109
381263
6311
06:27
Now, right now, there's no widely accepted standard
110
387574
2415
06:29
that a company or corporation can follow, and that's where Just Capital comes in,
111
389989
4342
06:34
because beginning this year and every year we'll be conducting a nationwide survey
112
394331
5320
06:39
of a representative sample of 20,000 Americans
113
399651
4130
06:43
to find out exactly what they think
114
403781
2920
06:46
are the criteria for justness in corporate behavior.
115
406701
3878
06:50
Now, this is a model that's going to start in the United States
116
410579
3012
06:53
but can be expanded anywhere around the globe,
117
413591
2635
06:56
and maybe we'll find out
118
416226
1881
06:58
that the most important thing for the public
119
418107
2868
07:00
is that we create living wage jobs, or make healthy products,
120
420975
5351
07:06
or help, not harm, the environment.
121
426326
3251
07:09
At Just Capital, we don't know, and it's not for us to decide.
122
429577
4273
07:13
We're but messengers,
123
433850
1996
07:15
but we have 100 percent confidence and faith in the American public
124
435846
4110
07:19
to get it right.
125
439956
1234
07:21
So we'll release the findings this September for the first time,
126
441880
3530
07:25
and then next year, we'll poll again,
127
445410
2440
07:27
and we'll take the additive step this time
128
447850
2299
07:30
of ranking the 1,000 largest U.S. companies
129
450149
3019
07:33
from number one to number 1,000 and everything in between.
130
453168
4552
07:37
We're calling it the Just Index,
131
457720
2831
07:40
and remember, we're an independent not-for-profit with no bias,
132
460551
5249
07:45
and we will be giving the American public a voice.
133
465800
5153
07:50
And maybe over time, we'll find out that as people come to know
134
470953
4203
07:55
which companies are the most just,
135
475156
2020
07:57
human and economic resources will be driven towards them,
136
477176
4040
08:01
and they'll become the most prosperous
137
481216
1974
08:03
and help our country be the most prosperous.
138
483190
2831
08:07
Now, capitalism has been responsible for every major innovation
139
487351
4106
08:11
that's made this world a more inspiring and wonderful place to live in.
140
491457
4151
08:16
Capitalism has to be based on justice.
141
496578
2865
08:19
It has to be, and now more than ever,
142
499443
2206
08:21
with economic divisions growing wider every day.
143
501649
3831
08:25
It's estimated that 47 percent of American workers
144
505480
3018
08:28
can be displaced in the next 20 years.
145
508498
3298
08:31
I'm not against progress.
146
511796
1973
08:33
I want the driverless car and the jet pack just like everyone else.
147
513769
4881
08:38
But I'm pleading for recognition that with increased wealth and profits
148
518650
5850
08:44
has to come greater corporate social responsibility.
149
524500
5430
08:49
"If justice is removed," said Adam Smith, the father of capitalism,
150
529930
5735
08:55
"the great, the immense fabric of human society must in a moment
151
535665
5754
09:01
crumble into atoms."
152
541419
4207
09:05
Now, when I was young, and there was a problem,
153
545626
3764
09:09
my mama used to always sigh and shake her head and say,
154
549390
4183
09:13
"Have mercy, have mercy."
155
553573
4057
09:17
Now's not the time for us, for the rest of us to show them mercy.
156
557630
4551
09:22
The time is now for us to show them fairness,
157
562181
3189
09:25
and we can do that, you and I,
158
565370
2476
09:27
by starting where we work, in the businesses that we operate in.
159
567846
5254
09:33
And when we put justness on par with profits,
160
573100
3360
09:36
we'll get the most wonderful thing in all the world.
161
576460
3948
09:40
We'll take back our humanity.
162
580408
3366
09:43
Thank you.
163
583774
2647
09:46
(Applause)
164
586421
3825
About this website

This site will introduce you to YouTube videos that are useful for learning English. You will see English lessons taught by top-notch teachers from around the world. Double-click on the English subtitles displayed on each video page to play the video from there. The subtitles scroll in sync with the video playback. If you have any comments or requests, please contact us using this contact form.

https://forms.gle/WvT1wiN1qDtmnspy7