
The huge number of transnational capitalist firms straddling the planet are effectively controlled by a very small group of centrally important players, says a ground-breaking survey conducted by Swiss researchers.
Deploying statistical methods normally used in physics, Stefania Vitali, James B. Glattfelder and Stefano Battiston of the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology, Zurich, data-mined information held by business intelligence firm Bureau van Dijk. The data, which included company ownership structures, allowed a new insight into the relationships between 43,060 corporations.
In 2007, a mere 147 entities controlled nearly 40% of the monetary value of all transnational corporations, they said in their paper titled .
They defined a transnational company as one having at least 10% of its holdings in more than one country. They then looked at 鈥渦pstream and downstream鈥 ownership connections.
This produced a network of 600,508 鈥渆conomic actors鈥 connected through more than a million ownership ties. Just 737 of these 鈥渁ctors鈥 control 80% of the operating revenue of the 43,060 transnational firms.
Within this central group there is a core of 147, which controls 38.4% of all the wealth. 鈥淭he top actors are in the core and hence are interconnected and do not carry out their business in isolation,鈥 Glattfelder said on .
The researchers call this core group an economic 鈥渟uper-entity鈥.
Glattfelder told that ownership of publicly held corporations is broadly distributed, but, 鈥渢ake a step back and it鈥檚 all flowing into the same few hands.鈥
This level of centralisation gives control and, of course, profits but also brings its own risks, as Brandy Aven of Pittsburgh鈥檚 Carnegie Mellon University Tepper School of Business said to Sciencenews.org.
鈥淚magine a disease spreading,鈥 she said. 鈥淚f you have a high school where everyone鈥檚 sleeping together and one person gets syphilis, then everyone gets syphilis.鈥
As it draws on pre-global financial crisis data, the report shows the now defunct Lehman Brothers as one of the big players at the centre 鈥 an example of capitalist 鈥渟yphilis鈥, if ever there was one.
Vitali, Glattfelder and Battiston鈥檚 paper is the first time research of this sort has been carried out on the international economy. Earlier, Griffith University researcher Georgina Murray in her Capitalist Networks and Social Power in Australia and New Zealand made a similar analysis. She coupled it with individual interviews of leading capitalists, revealing their sincere beliefs.
鈥淭he whole world is our oyster so what is so special about here,鈥 one of them told her, referring to Australia. 鈥淲e put our money out when we think it's good for us. That's all we do. We don't look for any other reason.鈥