@inbook{10.3138/9781442674660.9, ISBN = {9780802082732}, URL = {http://www.jstor.org/stable/10.3138/9781442674660.9}, abstract = {There can be few topics at this juncture of the development of human civilization that are more in need of careful exploration than ʹEthics and Capitalism.ʹ It is now the virtually unanimous view of leaders in both the industrialized and the developing world that capitalism, or, as some put it, a free market economy, is the only viable model for organizing efficient and productive economies. This view, emerging as it has from the dramatic, non-violent, world-wide collapse of communism,¹ is no longer remarkable. What is striking, however, is the way in which the emergence of this global consensus has been}, author = {A.W. CRAGG}, booktitle = {Ethics and Capitalism}, pages = {122--140}, publisher = {University of Toronto Press}, title = {Business, Globalization, and the Logic and Ethics of Corruption}, year = {2000} }