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Saturday, August 18, 2007
Nick Nichols :: Townhall.com Columnist
Corporate Social Responsibility: Picking 91 Million Pockets
by Nick Nichols
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Economist Milton Friedman once wrote that some “businessmen believe that they are defending free enterprise when they declaim that business is not concerned merely with profit but also with promoting desirable social ends; that business has a social conscience and takes seriously its responsibility for providing employment, eliminating discrimination, avoiding pollution and whatever else may be the catchwords of the contemporary crop of reformers.” Friedman added, “In fact, they are . . . preaching pure and unadulterated socialism. Businessmen who talk this way are unwitting puppets of the intellectual forces that have been undermining the basis of a free society these past decades.”

Corporate executives are responsible for obeying laws and regulations. However, the Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR) movement is all about business leaders spending company resources (a.k.a. other people’s money) on social and environmental programs that are not mandated by law.

It does not take an economics guru to conclude that diverting corporate assets away from activities that improve earnings endangers the financial wellbeing of millions of Americans. About half of American households own stock. So, the pocket books of more than 91 million of our fellow citizens are tied to the fortunes of publicly traded corporations. Every dollar that is shanghaied from corporate coffers represents a hidden levy on shareholders, undermining their financial prosperity.

Why would business titans embrace corporate socialism? Some have chosen appeasement in response to activist group pressure. Others have been duped by public relations snake oil peddlers who claim that jumping on the CSR bandwagon will protect a company from public attacks if something goes wrong.

It’s pure bunk.

Look at what happened to British Petroleum (BP) after one of its refineries blew up and its Alaska pipeline started leaking. The poster child for corporate do-gooders was publicly skewered for mismanagement. All those millions that BP spent posing for holy pictures with the likes of Greenpeace paid zero dividends in the court of public opinion as investors watched share values plummet.

A quick Google search suggests that thousands of companies are joining the march toward corporate socialism. One critic claims that Nike spends about ten-million dollars a year just staffing its CSR program. After all, it costs cash to spend other people’s money. Reports must be written. Meetings attended. News releases issued. Croissants consumed.

While no one knows how many shareholder dollars are being spent each year on CSR, I suspect the bottom line would impress even the Congressional Budget Office. Think of CSR as the redistribution of prosperity away from those who have invested their savings in the stock market and toward those people or things that the unelected non-government organizations of the world consider worthy.

CSR has become a rallying cry for Members of Congress who have advanced their careers by attacking capitalism and successful corporations. For those on Capitol Hill who think it is about time corporations got a dose of social responsibility, think again. The CSR movement is not only about redistributing the wealth, but also about redistributing political power—away from legislators and regulators and toward non-government organizations that are unaccountable to the public and rarely accountable to government. You may think it is cute that corporate executives are frolicking with activist groups, but I suspect you will think differently when those same groups determine that you are irrelevant.

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About The Author

Nick currently develops and teaches graduate-level crisis management courses at the Johns Hopkins University and co-author of Rules for Corporate Warriors: How to Fight and Survive Attack Group Shakedown.

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corporations and government
Has anyone paid attention to the dynamic between freedom (including free markets and corporate enterprise) and government? Corporate freedom is no different from individual freedom (because individuals run corporations ... duh). Lilly makes this point without realizing she's doing so.

Specifically, freedom only works with self-discipline and self-restraint motivated at least in part by ethics and morality. If a person wants to act amorally, he (or she) will find himself in the slammer. Quickly. Protests about "freedom" will be laughed off. You aren't free to steal, assault people,. murder, etc. If a LOT of people start acting amorally, then what will ensue will be a call for more laws.

Ditto for corporations. If most act ethically, then most people will be content to leave them be. But public, visible corporate scandals like pollution, poisoning, and pension theft result in a public outcry for more regulation.

So, Corporate America, to a great extent, if people perceive you as acting amorally, then you have yourselves to blame.

But before the left-leaners on this forum cheer too loudly, I will conclude by saying that even if it is true that one cannot legislate morality, it is even more true that legislation cannot take the place of morality. As we lose our moral center as a culture, trying to scrape something back through legislation is a waste of time.

One reason for this too
Martin writes:
Just remember that one of the greatest wealth producing periods in the history of the USA was between 1868 and 1910. Robber barrons or not the creation of wealth for the people of our country and for that matter the world was extrodinary by all accounts and we had no income tax!

God save the USA
------------------------

America still used real money,gold and silver, not the fiat Federal Reserve Notes of today.

What cost $1.00 in 1868 would cost $0.64 in 1910.
http://www.westegg.com/inflation/infl.cgi

Purchasing power increased, not decreased as it does since 1913 and the bankers were handed Congressional Powers over money and its value.
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