How Can Finance Benefit Everyone?

Avatar photo
Kishou · Jan 24, 2025
Financial activities are full of risks, and a few capitalists monopolize profits. By popularizing investment knowledge, enhancing transparency, promoting borderless investment, and advocating for socially responsible investment, we aim to build a more equitable financial ecosystem that benefits everyone.

Financial activities such as stocks and futures carry high risks for many, while financial institutions and capitalists can exploit informational advantages and price manipulation to reap massive profits. This unequal reality makes the wealth market a game for a select few. So, how can we make the financial system benefit everyone? We need to reexamine and adjust the framework and rules.


1. Popularizing investment knowledge: Enabling everyone to participate in finance

Most people shy away from the financial markets due to unfamiliarity with technical jargon and complex rules. Terms like Contango (spot premium), LIBOR (London Interbank Offered Rate), and CDS (Credit Default Swaps) may be well-known within financial circles but can seem distant and inaccessible to the average person. However, participating in finance doesn’t necessarily require mastery of these terms. Basic financial education should cover the following:

  • The operation mechanisms of the financial markets
  • The basic principles of investing, such as the balance between risk and return
  • How to identify opportunities and pitfalls in the capital market

Real-life example: How the spread of financial knowledge can change destinies

In India, the Pradhan Mantri Jan Dhan Yojana initiative, launched in 2014, introduced millions of low-income individuals who had never accessed banking services to the financial system by promoting bank accounts and financial education. This not only improved household financial management skills but also significantly boosted savings rates, providing new momentum for economic development.

Only when everyone understands the basic knowledge of financial markets can we truly achieve a wealth distribution system where everyone can participate.


2. Improve transparency in corporate operations and investments

Ordinary investors often cannot gain a clear view of how the companies they invest in operate. For example, who is managing the projects? How are the company’s resources allocated? What production processes do the products undergo? These details are often hidden in a “black box” and only come to light when a scandal breaks. For example:

  • Enron scandal: This company, once hailed as one of the most innovative in the U.S., used complex financial maneuvers to hide massive losses, ultimately leading to significant losses for investors.
  • Wirecard scandal: The German payment giant was exposed for financial fraud, resulting in the evaporation of billions of euros in assets, leaving investors with nothing.

Investors need not only returns on their investments but also the right to be informed about the use of their funds and the operations of the companies they invest in.


3. Promoting borderless financial investment

The current financial market still has many restrictions, such as investment barriers between countries and capital flow regulations. This not only reduces the chances for ordinary people to enter the global market but also limits the funding channels for small businesses and social organizations.

Envisioning a borderless investment environment

In the future, borderless financial investment would allow individuals to provide funding for the following entities:

  • Multinational corporations or small social enterprises
  • Specific projects or specific aspects of a project
  • An individual with leadership ability

For example, company employees could invest in their boss’s decisions instead of solely relying on the overall profitability of the company. If a leader’s performance is poor, investors could withdraw their investment, promoting more transparent management and higher execution efficiency. This form of investment could also have a significant impact on the company’s power structure, which we will analyze further in the future.

The support of blockchain

Through blockchain technology, we can realize this form of borderless investment. For example, decentralized finance (DeFi) platforms allow individual investors to directly participate in global projects without intermediaries. This technology is gradually breaking down the geographical limitations of traditional finance, allowing more people to benefit from global economic growth.


4. Advocating for socially responsible financial investment

Currently, the main goal of financial investment is still wealth growth, but we must introduce more concepts of social responsibility. Before making decisions, investors should consider the following questions:

  • Can the company bring positive impact to society?
  • What is the potential for the company’s long-term development?
  • Are there any actions that exploit employees or harm the environment?

Trends in Socially Responsible Investing (SRI)

In recent years, socially responsible investing (SRI) has gradually gained attention. Although it is still in its infancy and has yet to fully realize its potential for “universal participation,” some trends are already emerging, such as:

  • ESG Standards: Environmental (Environment), Social (Social), and Governance (Governance) criteria have become key reference standards for many investment funds. According to a study by Morgan Stanley, the global assets in ESG investment funds reached $31 trillion in 2019, highlighting the market’s focus on social responsibility.
  • Sustainable Development Bonds: Green bonds and social impact bonds, advocated by the United Nations, have provided substantial funding for global public welfare projects.

This type of investment not only helps improve social and environmental conditions but also encourages businesses to develop in a more sustainable direction.


Our goal at Yicheng Commonweal: Social Citizen Finance

At Yicheng Commonweal, one of our goals is to establish a “Social Citizen Finance” system that allows everyone to participate and benefit. Through methods including but not limited to the following, we aim to promote a fairer financial ecosystem:

  1. Public Economic Education: By offering open courses and online resources, we aim to help more people understand the basics of financial operations and how a social citizen can use investments to safeguard their rights.
  2. Transparency Policies: Advocate for businesses and social organizations to disclose the use of funds and operational details.
  3. Technological Innovation: Leverage blockchain and decentralized financial tools to provide ordinary people with secure and efficient investment platforms.

This model not only reduces the inefficiency and bureaucracy of traditional financial institutions, but also enhances the overall resilience of society, creating a more equitable and diverse economic system.

Share this article:
LEARN MORE

Continue Reading

被阉割的民主:为什么全世界的“罢免”总是失败?

被阉割的民主:为什么全世界的“罢免”总是失败?

Kishou · Aug 7, 2025

引言: “民主”的表面风光中,藏着最隐秘的真相: 人民可以选人,却极难罢人。 在大多数民主国家中,罢免制度或如虚设,或成摆设,即使爆发大规模抗议,最终也大多无疾而终。 为什么“民主罢免”几乎从未成功? 这不是个战术问题,而是一个结构性真相。以下,从五大系统层级逐一分析。 一、制度设计层:罢免权从未被制度化为有效权力 民主国家的权力架构,本质是“有限代议制”,不是“直接公民制”: 对象 是否人民可控 实际约束来源 行政首脑(总统、总理) 一定程度上(选举) 政党与制度 议会议员 多数可选 党派纪律与资本输血 法官、军队、情报系统 几乎不可控 高阶任命与内网秩序 所谓“民主罢免”,其制度障碍包括: “制度伪装了权利,遮蔽了主权”。人民拥有“罢免”的名义,却没有“罢免”的实权。 二、权力结构层:政党-资本-行政三权共谋的自保体系 现代民主早已演化为“政党治理结构”,本质是: 人民→投票→政党→组织内升降 → 官僚系统 → 实权运作。 在这个体系中: 因此,所谓罢免,不是挑战一个官员,而是挑战一个完整共谋结构。 三、社会结构层:人民是分裂的、碎片化的,难以完成集体动员 罢免成功依赖于强大的社会共识和行动能力,但当代社会具有以下解构特征: 人民不再是统一力量,而是无数原子个体的散沙集合。 没有结构性的集体,罢免就永远只是少数人的孤勇抗争。 四、媒体与话语权层:公共舆论被资本和国家共管,民意沦为情绪风暴 媒体系统原本是民主制度的“第四权力”,但现实中: 结果是: 五、深层治理层:国家系统的“免疫机制”主动消解罢免运动 在国家治理的深层逻辑中,每个政治体都有一套“制度性免疫系统”,以维持稳定。 当罢免行动威胁到制度根基时,国家会动用以下手段: 在此层面,人民面对的是整个国家机器的反制。 所谓“罢免”,成了文明社会中的“系统性自焚”。 结语:罢免为何失败?因为人民并未真正掌握主权 “民主罢免”失败,不是偶然。它是: 制度性设计、权力结构性自保、社会结构性解体、话语权垄断与国家治理逻辑合力作用下的必然结果。 如果一个民主制度只在选举之时允许人民“发声”,而在治理过程中彻底屏蔽人民的纠错能力,那它不过是: 一场精心编排的仪式性游戏,一场用来安抚愤怒、分散注意、掩饰失控的舞台剧。   Photo by Kokuyo  

A governance model centered on complete citizens

A governance model centered on complete citizens

Daohe · Aug 7, 2025

The institutional evolution and historical trajectory of civil politics Produced by Yicheng Commonweal To those who truly love their country I. Opening: Who does true governance belong to? In today’s world, nearly every nation inscribes grand slogans such as “putting people first” or “rule of law” into its political declarations. These phrases are treated as […]

read more

Related Content

Social Enterprise Finance: Investing in Shaping Future Destiny
Avatar photo
Kishou · Nov 16, 2024
Introduction In today’s world, finance has become an integral part of personal and corporate life. However, for most people, financial participation often revolves around wealth preservation or accumulation. While tools like stocks, mutual funds, and cryptocurrencies have democratized access to investment markets, this engagement often remains disconnected from deeper values such as personal fulfillment or […]
How capitalism’s financial system intensifies class immobility
Avatar photo
Kishou · Jan 20, 2025
Modern finance is rife with inequality. Ordinary individuals are left at an informational and resource disadvantage, increasing their financial risks in investment. In contrast, capitalists exploit insider knowledge and market control to generate massive gains, widening the gap in wealth and solidifying class divides. Urgent reforms are necessary to curb these injustices.
View All Content