Marjorie Kelly has always been an excellent and accessible writer, presenting a sharp critique of the prevailing model of corporate capitalism.
When we talk about changing the economic system (which we must if we want a more equitable and sustainable world), we need to drill down on what makes the system what it is -- its foundational assumptions that give it shape and manifest and reproduce throughout. Kelly homes in on the phenomena of "wealthy supremacy" and "capital bias." The former she defines as "the cultural and political processes and attitudes by which persons of wealth accumulate and maintain prestige, privilege, and power that others lack." The latter she defines as "the bias toward the maximum increase of capital--maximum benefit to wealth holders--that operates inside the processes and institutions through which capital deploys functional power." As we grapple with the forces of white supremacy, patriarchy, etc., we must understand the workings of these other forms of bias, especially because they can be present in things positioning themselves as solutions to our global polycrisis. Indeed, countries that are not technically "capitalist" are not inherently free of these biases.
Kelly knows these biases well from years of working in the CSR and business ethics space, seeing the limitations of even the best of corporate reformers and a tendency to resort to framing any necessary social or environmental change as really what's best for the bottom line (as the ultimate arbiter of value).
Kelly debunks the myths that undergird wealth supremacy and challenges us to broaden our understanding of what the economy really is. I especially appreciated her chapter debunking the myth that workers are not part of a corporation, challenging the "thingification" of corporations that present workers as burdens or costs rather than an essential part of the human community that constitutes a corporation.
What makes Kelly such an effective writer is that she is not just a critic: her works always contain a hopeful note about the better world that is possible, here focusing on the democratization of the economy and of finance -- especially her work on changing models of ownership.