A Physicist’s Deep-Dive into Who Controls the World Economy

In this TED talk, physicist James B. Glattfelder looks at who controls the world economy, focusing first on ownership as a complex system. He says, in his introduction:

“We spend billions of dollars trying to understand the origins of the universe while we still don’t understand the conditions for a stable society, a functioning economy, or peace.”

Network Analysis of Economics as a Complex System

He uses analytic techniques from science to look at the ownership of global corporations and control of the economy.

So we started with a database containing 13 million ownership relations from 2007. This is a lot of data, and because we wanted to find out who rules the world, we decided to focus on transnational corporations, or TNCs for short. These are companies that operate in more than one country, and we found 43,000. In the next step, we built the network around these companies, so we took all the TNCs’ shareholders, and the shareholders’ shareholders, etc., all the way upstream, and we did the same downstream, and ended up with a network containing 600,000 nodes and one million links. This is the TNC network which we analyzed.

So he goes from there to control. How much control is how concentrated?

Disturbing data with disturbing conclusions

The talk is from 2012. It looks at the phenomenon of the great recession, the 2008 world financial crisis. But he goes into the underlying structure, and the enormous problems related to concentrated ownership and control in a very few hands.

If you want to compute the flow in an ownership network, this is what you have to do. It’s actually not that hard to understand. Let me explain by giving you this analogy. So think about water flowing in pipes where the pipes have different thickness. So similarly, the control is flowing in the ownership networks and is accumulating at the nodes. So what did we find after computing all this network control? Well, it turns out that the 737 top shareholders have the potential to collectively control 80 percent of the TNCs’ value. Now remember, we started out with 600,000 nodes, so these 737 top players make up a bit more than 0.1 percent. They’re mostly financial institutions in the U.S. and the U.K. And it gets even more extreme. There are 146 top players in the core, and they together have the potential to collectively control 40 percent of the TNCs’ value.

And what does that mean for the long-term stability, and peace, in the world? You decide. First, watch this 13-minute video. And by the way, the original is on the TED site as Who Controls the World.

4 thoughts on “A Physicist’s Deep-Dive into Who Controls the World Economy

  1. Bryan Zak – Provides training and counseling focused on the specific business development needs for the Kenai Peninsula communities to include Homer, Kenai, Soldotna, and several rural communities. Identifies opportunities, develops focus, and provides tactical business solutions • Provides guidance and counselling to include business planning and modeling, loan proposal assistance, financing options and business growth strategies. • Oversight of administrative staff in the Kenai, AK SBDC office. • Advocate for the SBDC mission statewide through community participation, public speaking and networking opportunities. • Conducts “Profit Mastery” training classes on a basis, or number per year, or to a goal of number of people • Conduct one-on-one counseling for pre-qualified candidates for selected core services. • Initiates surveys to better understand the community needs and targeted services. • Attended national SBDC training annually • Advocates the benefits of the SBDC to Kenai Peninsula government entities to ensure regional funding is achieved to sustain the region. • Participates in strategic planning meetings to include the Malcom Baldrige application process • SBA Business of the Year Award selected in 2009 and 2010 from the Kenai Peninsula Region counselled clients • Provided counseling services to the Seward SBDC office until the opportunity allowed for a full time position. • Introduced tracking program, charts, (remember you introduced a new way to track things)
    Bryan Zak says:

    Tim can you create a spreadsheet that would allow the user to apply this theory to different layers of a societal network? For instance the lowest level might be the economy generated by the local farmers market, then the next layer up might be the community that includes non-profits, for-profits, city government, local state and federal employees, and public utilities.

    1. Tim Berry – Eugene, OR – Founder and chairman of Palo Alto Software, founder of bplans, co-founder of Borland International, Stanford MBA, author of books and software on business planning and startups, baby boomer, exhippy, married 54 years, father of five.
      Tim Berry says:

      Hi Bryan, interesting thought, I can imagine such a thing but I couldn’t imagine it well enough to lay it into a spreadsheet.

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