It astounds me that no-one is seeing this for what it is - the failure of capitalism as it is cons uted because it concentrates on only one principal, that is return to shareholders. It is time to build a new capitalism which encompasses social responsibility and environmental costs into the equation and encourages corporations to be good citizens, not just money-churners.
Prior to this downturn, corporations were taking massive profits for years, and yet the first thing they have to do in a downturn is lay off staff in order to maintain some sort of dividend flow to shareholders - does that actually make sense to anyone? Wouldn't it be better if corporations were allowed to retain staff during tough times, keeping people in work, in their homes, with food on their tables, by sacrificing some of their returns to shareholders? Right now they CANNOT do that under fiduciary responsibility. That is the sort of thing I'm talking about when I refer to social responsibility.
As for the environment - we have all been living for free off the environment because the economic system takes little or no account of environmental costs - and this century we are going to pay the piper. I am not only talking about climate change, I'm talking about toxic pollution, soil degradation, disappearing groundwater, fishery depletion, etc. The smart way out of this depression would be to invest massively in sustainable energy and water resources, and closed cycle manufacturing - huge, necessary investments for the future of economies and environments - but I don't see anyone even considering that. Sure, there's a lot of rhetoric, but very little proposal for action.
This is a broad-based systemic failure, but where are the proposals for a new, more resilient and rational economic system?