About This Site

Creative Capitalism: A Conversation is a web experiment designed to produce a book -- a collection of essays and commentary on capitalism, philanthropy and global development -- to be edited by us and published by Simon and Schuster in the fall of 2008. The book takes as its starting point a speech Bill Gates delivered this January at the World Economic Forum in Davos. In it, he said that many of the world's problems are too big for philanthropy--even on the scale of the Gates Foundation. And he said that the free-market capitalist system itself would have to solve them.

This is the public blog of a private website where a group of invited economists have spent the past couple of weeks criticizing and debating those claims. Over the next couple of months we'll be posting much of that material here, in the hopes of eliciting public commentary. Some of the public commentary -- the comments posted on this blog -- will also be used in the book. (Comments to the effect of "capitalism is evil and Bill Gates is a fool" probably won't be used. But we're genuinely open to opinions of all stripes, and all of the contributors who do end up in the finished product will be paid on a per-word basis, which should work out to between one and two dollars per word.)

The same goes for economics bloggers who write about the stuff here on their own sites: If we can get permission, we'd like to use that material too.

We also invite contributions by email. You can send submissions to conorjclarke [at] gmail [dot] com. (Anything you send can be posted here, though we might edit it a bit first.) We are especially interested in contributions from economists and anyone working in development. But we welcome pretty much anything that's interesting and well-written.

So feel free to comment. You can start with the Gates speech, along with the transcript of a conversation we've recorded between Bill Gates and Warren Buffett. You'll also find commentary on the speech from Michael Kinsley, William Easterly, Richard Posner, Gregory Clark, Ed Glaeser, Gary Becker, Steven Landsburg and more. (For a list of others who have agreed to contribute to the project, click here.) And since we'll be posting more in the days and weeks to come, please subscribe to our feed.

Have a look around. Contact us if you have questions. And thanks for coming.

--Mike Kinsley and Conor Clarke