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We need a return to some of the "Liberal Methodist/Presbyterian" values of doing business in the early 20thC - without the religion, where the accumulation of wealth leads to both companies and individuals looking at being philanthropic through financing projects and contributions of time to the community, not just at owner/board level but permitted through the organisation..... A sense of being and ethics along side the accumulation of wealth.
There are of course some generous philanthropists out there, mainly American, where are the Brit ones, Branson a little.....but we have no one on the scale of Carnegie - how many libraries did he fund in the US, Scotland and the UK at large, as well as Canada - and his funding of scholarships and "purposeful" grantsis still going a century later...
Apart from the acts of Banks, one really has to look at secretive folk like Soros or the Barclay Bros - or question how families like the Sainsburys, the Cohens, (Tesco), Cadburys etc could do more. And, also in addition to the City, I think shareholders of major Corps like Shell, BP, Unilever should be questioning their boards to upping their contributions to society - which are paltry as a % of turnover or net income before tax.