Editorial
Corporate Socialism
The idea that making a profit is somehow ignoble has ancient roots. Partly it stems from the utterly fallacious notion that when someone wins, someone else must lose. So if you go to the mall and purchase a sweater you really like, you must rip off the store where you do this. It is only after modern economics got going full blast that it became clear that when there is a purchase, both sides win. Or at least they understand themselves as having won. You got the sweater, they got the money, you both got a deal!
The myth of the zero-sum exchange, however, continues and politicians and social agitators capitalize on it all the time. So when people in business make profits, the social commentators – advocates of the alleged social responsibility of corporations and business in general – insist they are engaging in illicit exploitation, kind of the way a drug pusher does when selling drugs to a junkie. (Junkies have hardly any will power, so there the idea makes some sense.)
Now this zero-sum idea has been an influential one within the fields of political economy and business ethics. It gives rise to such silly notions as that people doing successful business must "give back to their communities," as if they had stolen their profits. So every time one is part of an exchange one finds satisfactory, one must have made gains illegitimately and needs to atone for it by "giving back".
An entire movement has sprung from these ideas. It is called the corporate social responsibility (CSR) movement. It basically advocates that successful people in business have an obligation to do pro bono work in their communities, to do service free of charge, to settle up with the folks there whom they have ripped off. Never mind that all those folks who supposedly were ripped off actually made good deals as they traded with the businesses that are supposed to owe them! Another name for it is "stakeholder corporate management" in line with which managers of companies aren't supposed to work for the owners and investors and deliver products or services at a good price to costumers so all are pleased with the results. No. Management is supposed to work for the community, for anyone who has his or her hand out for free goodies, for stuff that the business is supposed to pay for, not those to whom the business is providing work on mutually acceptable terms.
So what we have here is the slow but fundamental transformation of a commercial system into a socialist one where profit is demeaned, treated as something evil, and where people must become servants to each other and may not earn a profit from the work they do for others. This isn't supposed to be something to be expected in an emergency – say when there's a flood or earthquake – but the norm, the way businesses are supposed to carry on routinely.
We have here the basic idea that men and women aren't supposed to embark upon good deals through which they can prosper in their lives. No, they are supposed to be part of a huge organism in which everything is shared and no one is ever to be compensated for the work done for someone else. As if everyone were part of one's family or circle of intimates or even a bee hive. That's the central idea behind corporate social responsibility once clearly understood, as well as behind socialism.
And now it is getting worse. CSR might be advocated as a voluntary policy by those running businesses. The same with stakeholder management. Though still destructive of business, at least no one is being forced to serve others. But now in several states across the U.S.A. – among them California, Vermont, Maryland and others – politicians have created, by legislation, "benefit corporations" in which managers may proceed to do pro bono work without having to answer to shareholders whose resources are being used for this.
Normally if managers mis-allocate company resources, they could be sued by the owners for malpractice but with this law they will become immune. The only recourse by shareholders will be to sell their stocks and of course these stocks will have lost a goodly portion of their value given that the company isn't committed to making a profit any longer; nor does the management have to answer to the owners for abandoning this task.
Imagine if one were to hire a doctor to help with one's medical condition and this doctor decided that during the hour one has set aside to go for a visit several nonpaying patients will come to the office and take up the time one needs to get one's medical help. Such a doctor – indeed, any professional who is supposed to do work for clients – would be leaving his or her post, breaching his or her oath of office, which is to fulfill the terms of the contract with clients.
I teach classes at a university and my students can count on me to be there for them, given that they have been accepted by my institution on mutually satisfactory terms. But then imagine that I am told by local politicians and bureaucrats that instead of grading their papers, meeting them during office hours, and teaching them during class time, I must provide service to people in the neighborhood and if I do not, I will be in violation of the law!
We are certainly moseying toward a socialist system in which the decisions of professionals and clients are irrelevant and what matters is what the politicians want from us.
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Posted by William3 on 05/03/10 05:40 PM
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Posted by Leonardo Pisano on 05/03/10 05:31 PM
In my perception, CSR has wider implications than economical profit. Its central theme is that organizations have a role in society and that they need to operate in a responsible way, having regard for the environment it operates in. This implies operating along ethical principles, making sustainable products, caring for the environment (no unnecessary waste, efficient use of energy, etc), carefully treating its human resources, etc. Stakeholders within this context are not only shareholders, but also employees, people living in the neighborhood of the company's plants, society, suppliers, customers, etc.
CSR doesn't hinder or even "prohibit" making a profit, nor there's an obligation to give it back to the people that are supposedly "ripped off".
So, in this view, in itself CSR isn't a bad thing, and it provides freedom to organizations, not only if they wish to adopt it but also with respect to the choices they wish to make. In the end of the day their choices affect either their short-to-medium term returns and/or their long-term business prospects.
As a concluding remark, a lot of businesses just advocate CSR and don't live by it. In this respect it has no substantial meaning and CSR is just a "political statement". But that's another matter.
Posted by C. Steven Rorke on 05/03/10 02:58 PM
Real world transactions are usually affected by some imbalance between the incentive of vendor and vendee to consummate a deal. at a given "price." In the antebellum South, slaves were provided incentive to work and slave owners received the benefit of that work. In monipolistic markets, the vendor sets the price and the vendee pays that price. In a stick-up in a dark alley, the price is set at "all your money"; the service provided by the man with the gun is the right to stay alive. In any transaction where the parties have unequal access to true information about the value of the subject of the transaction (sale of stock, sale of a product known by the vendor to be defective, etc.), abuse of the imbalance of information is likely. Most real world transsactions involve some imbalance in power, information or transactional incentive.
Societies make laws to promote stability and order, promote injustice and redress injustice, and to promote the general welfare. When governments come under the undue influence of one or another class, they also make laws to benefit that class. Sometimes, societies make laws that institutionalize market imbalances (e.g., slavery laws, apartheid, workman's comp, etc.); in those instances, such societies sometimes also make laws to regulate or ameliorate the effects of such imbalances (e.g., welfare, workfare, etc.).
Every statement is an oversimplification, including this one. It is always dangerous to draw unwarranted conclusions from an oversimplified argument.
Posted by Bill on 05/02/10 01:07 AM
Since this was a prescription drug at the time, it was covered by insurance and the cost passed on to the consumers. In short price fixing is rampant and results in enormous corporate profits. No one complains when a corporation sponsors a golf or tennis tournament and it is really doubtful legislated community service will be forced on anyone or any entity. I for one would not elect to be in this author's class.
Posted by Steve Cooper on 05/01/10 09:21 PM
Governments have created monopolies and monopoly profits by patents, regulations, handouts etc, supposedly "on behalf of the citizens". Now the firms are getting super profits, and as shown above governments want to claw this back "for the citizens".
Clearly The Bell would abhor this practice, but how do they stand on natural monopolies? For example, for a gas pipeline company there cannot be competition unless many different companies lay their own pipelines, digging up the roads many times. Without competition, gas supply companies must earn super profits if they maximize their profits. Should we allow this? This was the economic rationale behind government interference in industry. Where does The Bell stand? Super profits or government interference? Either way the consumer loses!
Posted by Gul on 05/01/10 07:34 AM
Posted by Tk on 05/01/10 07:23 AM
Big Government profit is bad because it takes more money from ordinary people, which means that they buy less things, which loses more jobs, lowers investments, decreases savings, and causes less charitable giving, which increases poverty, decreases prosperity, and lowers the standard of living for all.

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