Trust: The Social Virtues and the Creation of ProsperityIn Trust, a sweeping assessment of the emerging global economic order "after History", Fukuyama examines a wide range of national cultures in order to divine the hidden principles that make a good and prosperous society, and his findings strongly challenge the orthodoxies of both left and right. In fact, economic life is pervaded by culture and depends, Fukuyama maintains, on moral bonds of social trust. This is the unspoken, unwritten bond between fellow citizens that facilitates transactions, empowers individual creativity, and justifies collective action. In the global struggle for economic predominance that is now upon us - a struggle in which cultural differences will become the chief determinant of national success - the social capital represented by trust will be as important as physical capital. But trust varies greatly from one society to another, and a map of how social capital is distributed around the world yields many surprises. The greatness of this country, he maintains, was built not on its imagined ethos of individualism but on the cohesiveness of its civil associations and the strength of its communities. But Fukuyama warns that our drift into a more and more extreme rights-centered individualism - a radical departure from our past communitarian tradition - holds more peril for the future of America than any competition from abroad. |
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Page 104
... Europe or around the world more broadly . The European Commission , for example , latched onto the Italian ... Europe and has been much less vigorous for Europe as a whole than for the United States . 22 Many promoters of the idea of ...
... Europe or around the world more broadly . The European Commission , for example , latched onto the Italian ... Europe and has been much less vigorous for Europe as a whole than for the United States . 22 Many promoters of the idea of ...
Page 246
... Europe , the guilds sank deep roots in the imperial free cities , where they won the right to manage their own affairs and became bastions of independence from seigneurial and patrician control.1 The guilds were therefore key ...
... Europe , the guilds sank deep roots in the imperial free cities , where they won the right to manage their own affairs and became bastions of independence from seigneurial and patrician control.1 The guilds were therefore key ...
Page 264
... Europe 22.8 35.3 Europeans in Europe 22.8 35.5 Newly industrializing countries 25.7 41.0 Source : James P. Womack , Daniel T. Jones , and Daniel Roos , The Machine That Changed the World : The Story of Lean Production ( New York ...
... Europe 22.8 35.3 Europeans in Europe 22.8 35.5 Newly industrializing countries 25.7 41.0 Source : James P. Womack , Daniel T. Jones , and Daniel Roos , The Machine That Changed the World : The Story of Lean Production ( New York ...
Contents
On the Human Situation at the End of History | 3 |
PART II | 12 |
The Twenty Percent Solution | 13 |
Copyright | |
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American argue Asia Asian associations authority behavior Cambridge central chaebol Chalmers Johnson China Chinese family Chinese societies church companies Comparative competitive Confucianism contrast corporations countries create culture degree democracy economic development economists efficient enterprises entrepreneurs ethical Europe example factory familistic family businesses firms France French German global groups growth habit high-trust History Hong Kong human iemoto important individual individualistic industrial institutions Italy Japan Japanese keiretsu kinship Korean labor large-scale lean manufacturing lean production less liberal lineage low-trust manufacturing ment modern moral Mormon neoclassical neoclassical economics nomic obligation organizations peasant percent political problem professionally managed Protestant Protestantism relationships relatively religious revolution role scale sector share social capital South Korea spontaneous sociability structure Studies Taiwan tend tion traditional trust twentieth century unions United University Press virtually Weber workers workplace York zaibatsu