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Localizing the World Economic Forum

Posted by Paul Shoe at Jan 24, 2012 07:00 AM |
The theme for this year's World Economic Forum is The Great Transformation: Shaping New Models. My position is that we need to focus more on harnessing social and human capital (not just financial capital). What do you think? Given the challenges confronting us in 2012 and beyond, what does the social sector have to do to think -- and be thought of -- differently? How can we rapidly change the "equation for social good"?

**This post also appeared as a guest blog post on the Foundation Center's Philantopic blog.

 

The theme for this year's World Economic Forum is The Great Transformation: Shaping New Models. A lot of people took a lot of time to write a convoluted description of what that really means :). Let's boil it down to this - because of the huge economic and social shifts taking place around the world, we don't have good models for understanding this "new norm" and for aligning stakeholders/citizens around a vision and inspiring institutions and individuals to realize those visions.

As some of you know, a few months ago I did the local TEDx about the power of human and social (not just or even primarily financial) capital to change our world in the years ahead. I think there are two parts of that message that might be relevant to WEF, and there's one I mentioned in the talk: our old ways of adding up the financial and institutional resources for community change flat out miss the power, potential, real and often more enduring, impact of human and social capital (I give credit to Partner Bill Henningsgaard for articulating that). This is starting to change, but we have to become much more intentional and specific about the role and value of non-financial capital in social change. That is a core part of our game at SVP.

We have to become much more intentional and specific about the role and value of non-financial capital in social change.

This other one I didn't mention at TED: another huge reason why human social capital is so critical is because the amount of money we can bring to bear on social issues is fixed, constrained, or even shrinking in many places. Whether we like it or not, that is not going to change anytime soon. Governments around the world are collectively tens of trillions (tr, not, b) of dollars in debt. No matter your politics, that is a fact that unquestionably points to constrained public resources. So the most plentiful, expandable assets we have are non-financial. Don’t get me wrong – money always matters, but if we want to increase the “supply” of assets for positive change, it’s gonna have to be leveraged, creative, new ways of expanding human and social capital. How much difference can that make? I don’t know for sure, but what is the “social value” that Facebook creates, and did it even exist 10 years ago? How can we most rapidly change the “equation for social good”?

I wonder what readers think … seriously.  Given the challenges confronting us in 2012 and beyond, what does the social sector have to do to think -- and be thought of -- differently? How can we rapidly change the "equation for social good"?

-- Paul Shoe

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Krystyna Williamson says:
Jan 26, 2012 01:23 PM

Paul, in response to the final question you pose, I think what the social sector needs to do is become much more focused and intnentional about outcomes. The "soft science" of the social sciences tends to enjoy the question more than the answer. We need to start applying hard science and measurements to the impact we have on issues, to noting trends and change and to measuring how the dollars/time invested affect results. It is not enough to continue "giving a man a fish" - we have to show the world how many fishermen we have created. Only with hard data will we convince governments and citizens that this is not a feel good field of endeavour, but one of real change and progress.

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