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Restructuring the Nation's Economy

http://westernperspective.blogspot.com/

So far, this discussion has centered on redefining the role of women in society. Now as the debate on health care reform heats up, it is time to forge ahead and consider the changing character of corporations and other business entities in general.

Corporations are never wholly independent of the state. Their very existence is a creation of state charters. Therefore, they always owe a duty together with the state's obligation to promote the common good.

Traditionally, corporations have been classified as either being for profit, or nonprofit. In today's world, this separation is often blurred. The question arises, is it always in the best interests of society to maximize profits in order to insure full employment and growth of the Gross Domestic Product?

Future economic structures will of necessity be structured so as to allow all persons affected by their activity, whether workers, managers, investors, geographical neighbors, or the public at large, to become stakeholders in the day-to-day running of the business operations. At this time there now exists a unique window of opportunity to make this transition from private insurers to decentralized, cooperatively owned and run enterprises in the field of health care. The alternative is to expand government bureaucracy and control which can only result in cost increases and reduction in health care services. It is incumbent upon our congressional representatives to act boldly in redefining the parameters for the allocation of these resources. The best way to accomplish this goal is through decentralization at the local level, giving maximum leeway for participation in the day to day activities by doctors, nurses and other care providers, and also by the heads of families and households whom they serve. President Obama has already outlined the need to reduce the cost of unnecessary and redundant procedures, and there seems to be no good reason to allow out of control government oversight boards, committees, and a new czar to replace the old, worn out model.

Rather, Congress must take action to bring about a new economic playing field in which all those involved in production and buying goods and services become essential stakeholders and participants in the decision making process at the local level. Just as the factories of the future will of necessity be organized to provide assembly line type employment for women and men, particularly among minorities, endowed with lower innate intelligence levels, so also, there must be a restructuring of the production process itself to give all participants, including these women and minority workers, and all American families as purchasers of the nation's goods and services, an equal say in the way in which things get done at the local level.

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