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Economía Regenerativa

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  1. Módulo 01: Introducción
    1.1 Lección 1: ¿Interesado en la regeneración?
  2. 1.2 Lección 2: ¿Qué es la economía regenerativa?
  3. 1.3 Lección 3: Principios de la Economía Regenerativa
    9 Temas
  4. 1.4 Lección 4: Hacia la Economía Regenerativa
    1 Cuestionario
  5. Módulo-02: Ir más allá de los círculos
    2.1 Lección 1: De la Economía Lineal a la Circular
  6. 2.2 Lección 2: El sistema anidado
  7. 2.3 Lección 3: De centrarse en el producto a centrarse en el proceso
    1 Cuestionario
  8. Módulo-03: Cambio de mentalidad de economía regenerativa
    3.1 Lección 1: Cambiar la mentalidad para transformar el sistema
    1 Tema
  9. 3.2 Lección 2: Cambio de mentalidad: ?Hacer? ¿de ser?
    2 Temas
  10. 3.3 Lección 3: Cambio de mentalidad: ?Ego? a ?Alma?
    1 Tema
    |
    1 Cuestionario
  11. Módulo 04: Marco de Economía Regenerativa
    4.1 Lección 1: Niveles de Paradigma
    6 Temas
  12. 4.2 Lección 2: Comprender los niveles del paradigma como sistema
  13. 4.3 Lección 3: Desarrollo de una práctica de economía regenerativa
    5 Temas
  14. 4.4 Lección 4: Crecimiento cuantitativo a crecimiento cualitativo
    2 Temas
    |
    1 Cuestionario
  15. Módulo 05: Enfoque colaborativo de la economía regenerativa
    5.1 Lección-1: Ecología y Economía Regenerativa 1
  16. 5.2 Lección-2: Economía del Desarrollo Humano
    9 Temas
  17. 5.3 Lección 3: Enfoque regenerativo para el desarrollo económico integral
    7 Temas
  18. 5.4 Lección 4: Cultura Regenerativa
    3 Temas
    |
    1 Cuestionario
  19. Módulo 06: Inversión Regenerativa
    6.1 Lección 1: El papel de las empresas
    2 Temas
  20. 6.2 Lección 2: Invertir desde una mente regenerativa
    1 Tema
  21. 6.3 Lección 3: Inversión en el sistema alimentario en una economía regenerativa
    4 Temas
    |
    1 Cuestionario
  22. Conclusión
Lección 19, Tema 1
En Progreso

6.1.1 Las empresas como sistema de partes interesadas

marzo 10, 2025
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The transactional perspective that these interactions are typically seen from is a major impediment to developing regenerative partnerships between enterprises and their surroundings. Economists frequently consider how businesses affect the economy in terms of the number of employment they create, tax revenues they provide, and GDP as a whole. Communities are viewed by businesses as sources of labor, supplies, and reliable infrastructure. But, businesses may play a much bigger role in community life. They may even help create a feeling of community identity and serve as a source of pride. For workers, they can offer doors to opportunity and personal growth as well as give them venues for creative expression. They might work together to invest in public infrastructure and support strong democracies. Businesses must transform from closed systems that are constantly negotiating, competing, and dealing with other stakeholders in their environments to open systems that are integrated into and in reciprocal interaction with their environments.

Transactions between specific players, as this graph illustrates, frequently follow opposing imperatives to maximize the value of the exchange. Conversely, reciprocity refers to transactions that support the system’s overall sound operation. Many of the advantages in reciprocal commerce are indirect and result from the value of being a member of a thriving whole. Stakeholder participation is consciously relational and developmental in regenerative development. This indicates that a regenerative firm will cultivate its stakeholder ecosystem by forging partnerships that are advantageous to each of its constituents. Also, these connections will be developmental, which means that they will be created to promote reciprocity by increasing stakeholders’ power to influence the overall health and growth of the system (or place).

It’s crucial to keep in mind that stakeholders have an interest in both a company and the neighborhood where it operates. Each stakeholder contributes their own distinct sort of capital to a company in order to attain an outcome that is important to them. Each shareholder is a co-investor as a result. Additionally, they anticipate a return on their investment in a manner that is appropriate for them. They anticipate generating this return by involvement in the company and its operations. This is a realistic expectation given that business is by definition the setting where these various investment types are combined to create new value. A regenerative business aims to develop connections with its stakeholders that create value. In the perspective of regenerative thinking, the phrase “value-adding” refers to a particular throughflow of value generation. When a firm helps its stakeholders more successfully produce value for themselves, it becomes valuable to them. In other words, a product gains value in the perspective of its user when it makes it possible for that user to more effectively pursue their own value-generating goals and aspirations.

A regenerative company has come up by carefully examining what important to stakeholders before engaging in connections that bring value. A business gives them the return they are looking for by assisting them in becoming more influential over the issues that matter to them. Employees, for instance, look for possibilities to develop personally in exchange for the capital of their time, effort, and creative energy. They learn how to take on increasingly difficult tasks that increase their chances of having a meaningful influence. The real investment return comes from the satisfaction of being capable of stretching out and manifest more of their innate ability, even though this is typically represented in greater responsibility and accordingly better income. This illustration demonstrates how the appropriate business strategy may strengthen co-creators’ talents and motivation while also creating value for the entire system.

Such a strategy results in a return on investment, which is a type of wealth?though not necessarily financial wealth. It denotes an increase in the initial capital fund as well as an improvement in the capacity to create further wealth through investing the money the return. In the case of the employee example, the growth has manifested as human capital, and they are now capable of managing more challenging or complex projects. It goes without saying that this rise in human capital benefits not just the individuals, but also their families and other groups to which they belong. In this way, the wealth of the entire business ecosystem rises together with the distinctive wealth of each partner, supporting a strong local economy.

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