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Saturday, September 08, 2007
Tom Borelli :: Townhall.com Columnist
Corporate Social Responsibility: What Would Reagan Do?
by Tom Borelli
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“A Time for Choosing”, the celebrated nomination address by Ronald Reagan supporting Barry Goldwater for president in 1964, included a strong message about the dangers of appeasing the Soviet Union:

Admittedly there is a risk in any course we follow … but every lesson in history tells us that the greater risk lies in appeasement, and this is the specter our well-meaning liberal friends refuse to face--that their policy of accommodation is appeasement, and it gives no choice between peace and war, only between fight and surrender. If we continue to accommodate, continue to back and retreat, eventually we have to face the final demand--the ultimatum.

Thankfully, President Reagan understood the dangers of appeasement and executed an aggressive strategy to confront the Soviet Union.

In contrast, today’s CEOs follow the opposite strategy – the path of appeasement by embracing corporate social responsibility (CSR). After years of badgering by special interest groups, CSR offers a progressive solution for companies to escape confrontation.

Over time, CSR has fundamentally changed business culture to a point where CEOs are delighted to play an active role in solving social and environmental issues. In this worldview, obeying the law and making a profit for investors is no longer a company’s sole mission – corporations must fill the gaps where government efforts have failed.

Because of CSR values, companies are being transformed into pacifists – rarely defending their businesses from regulatory action that threatens profitability. In fact, just the opposite is occurring; some companies are actually contributing to efforts that will actually harm its business.

Today, the environmental movement is effectively using global warming fears as a way to regulate SUV sales out of existence. The problem for automakers is that American consumers prefer SUVs, large cars, and light trucks. Furthermore, these sales provide the best profit margins for automakers.

The regulatory challenges facing the automobile industry, such as corporate average fuel economy standards (CAFÉ) and greenhouse gas emission limits, were set in motion by appeasement policies established years ago.

At the turn of the century, instead of confronting the business threat posed by global warming, William Clay Ford Jr., then chief executive of Ford Motor Company, had a better idea: embrace CSR.

The company declared war on its most profitable vehicles in its first corporate citizenship report in 2000 when it said SUVs contribute more to global warming than cars. Mr. Ford expressed concern that SUVs would harm the company’s reputation and he feared public opinion would turn against the company. According to news reports, the company wanted to be considered the “most environmentally responsible automaker.”

CSR proponents hailed the company’s retreat. The Sierra Club said, “…we applaud Ford's recognition of the environmental and safety problems posed by S.U.V.'s,'' and Business for Social Responsibility – a CSR advocacy group – noted that the company found itself in an “awkward situation because its most profitable products do not meet its goals for social responsibility.”

Also in 2000, Ford put dollars behind its CSR effort. In announcing the company’s $5 million sponsorship of the Carbon Mitigation Initiative (CMI) project at Princeton University, Mr. Ford said, “Corporations should be and could be a major force for resolving environmental and social concerns in the 21st century.”

CMI’s research agenda is “to develop and evaluate methods for keeping carbon emissions, the main contributor to greenhouse warming, out of the atmosphere….” By supporting CMI, Ford fueled the notion that carbon dioxide from its vehicles is a major cause of global warming.

With corporate dollars, CMI effectively whipped up global warming fears. The following is a list of news headlines that CMI touts on its website: “Alarm Sounded on Global Warming, Researchers Say Dangers Must Be Addressed Immediately”, "Study says U.S. Shouldn't Wait to Curb Carbon Emissions", “Gas Guzzlers” and “Declare War on Global Warming.”

The political response to fossil fuel fears that Ford helped generate is evident in California. In 2002, the state passed a law limiting greenhouse gas emissions from new vehicles sold in California in 2009. In 2006, California sued automakers over global warming because greenhouse gases caused billions of dollars in damages.

Global warming regulation is now on the national political stage. Recently, presidential candidate John Edwards called on Americans to give up their SUVs and said, "We are the worst polluter on the planet."

By 2003, Ford’s allies in the environmental movement turned on the company because business needs prevented the company from meeting its aggressive goals of reducing greenhouse gas emissions and improving gas mileage.

Despite the failure of its CSR strategy Ford and the other major carmakers recently joined the United States Climate Action Partnership (USCAP) – a coalition of corporations and environmental special interest groups that are calling “on the federal government to quickly enact strong national legislation to require significant reductions of greenhouse gas emissions.”

Perhaps the automakers believe the carbon dioxide war is lost and regulations are inevitable so they should help author the terms of surrender.

Conceivably, if they were not driving under the influence of CSR, the industry would form their own organization to fight regulations advocated by USCAP. This group, with a meaningful advertising budget, could educate the public on the numerous scientific holes in the man-made global warming theory and the huge economic cost that the consumer will bear.

To paraphrase Reagan, there is a risk in fighting. In retrospect, however, how could the consequences have been any worse for the auto industry? In this case, “retreat leads to the final ultimatum” meaning fewer sales, lower profitability and lower employment.

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About The Author

Thomas J. Borelli, PhD. is the editor of FreeEnterpriser.com and Director of the Free Enterprise Project at the National Center for Public Policy Research.

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Carrot & stick

Companies have no choice but to play ball with DC because DC picks the winners and losers in the market place, they punish and reward. DC makes hard laws and soft laws. Every company knows what those unwritten soft laws are or finds out quickly. When Bill Gates was only giving $78K a year to the DNC they decided to make an example to this new industry about the soft law of campaign finance. The industry quickly got the message and Gates set up a multi-million dollar lobby effort to pay off his DC masters and the others followed.

If banks don’t promote homosexuality and inner city loans etc., they quickly learn their mergers are rejected. In our fascist state the companies quickly learn what they must do to avoid the wrath and get the blessings and special privileges of DC.

ENVIRONMENTALISM
Global warming and most other forms of environmentalism are based on politically correct junk science, not sound science.

Environmentalism has become a gargantuan quasi religion bankrolled by politically liberal America and Christianity-hating groups and people who have manipulated so many private and public institutions that it is exceedingly difficult for the predominantly conservative opposing side to be influential in this regard.

When the free marketplace is allowed to do its job, the consumer is king. When the free marketplace is allowed to do its job, a corporation's first responsibility is to its stockholders.

Most Americans are, in some way, part of the investor class. Many are cultural conservatives. It's time for the investor class to "just say no" to junk science and political correctness and demand that they be removed from the corporate board rooms and school classrooms.


Former Senator ...
(and soon to be former presidential candidate) Edwards might have been wiser to look at the data on national CO2 emissions and to witness the air quality in China before "running off at the mouth".

Tastes change
"The problem for automakers is that American consumers prefer SUVs, large cars, and light trucks."

Tastes change.

In the late 1970s, Americans started preferring smaller, fuel-efficient cars when gasoline prices rose sharply. Then in the 1990s, when gasoline prices dropped sharply to low levels, Americans suddenly fell in love with big cars again--and this time SUVs got their shot.

This love affair with big cars is entirely a product of relatively cheap gasoline prices. (Which is why it's mostly an American phenomenon; gasoline is more expensive just about everywhere else in the developed world.)

In inflation-adjusted terms, gasoline is actually CHEAPER now than it was at the height of the so-called "energy crisis" of the late 1970s. That's why Americans prefer big cars--they think they can afford it.

But it won't last. Due to long-term secular demand caused by the industrialization of India and China, gasoline prices must now start rising faster than inflation.

And America's love affair with gas-guzzling cars will come to an end. When cheap gasoline is no more.


NEW GLOBAL STRATEGY

.....The Communists and totalatarians in our Government have finally figured out how to defeat free markets and Capitalism ...

.....put pressure on corporations through CSR mandates to have them commit financial suicide .....COLOSSUS

for yavapaidiane
yavapaidiane writes: "Environmentalism has become a gargantuan quasi religion bankrolled by politically liberal America and Christianity-hating groups"

I'll bet you wouldn't say that if you, or one of your loved ones, had asthma or chronic bronchitis.

I was disagnosed with adult-onset asthma myself. And let me tell you, asthma will make an amateur environmentalist out of ANY conservative--even you. Suddenly I had to worry about the factory upwind from my home that was pouring out sulfur dioxide. I had to sign up at the EPA website for smog alerts, so that during the summer I would be warned to stay indoors during a smog alert.

For me, and for anyone else with a chronic respiratory disease, environmental problems are VERY real and they REALLY DO limit our lifestyle choices.

Plus there are literally tens of millions of Americans with such illnesses, and pollution is making those illnesses worse, driving up health care costs. Asthmatics have to double up on their medications whenever smog is high.

As a philosophy, conservatism should NOT be associated with waste and mess and living for the moment at the expense of our future. Part and parcel of conservatism should be a moral code that includes living a virtuous life. And that virtue includes cleaning up the messes you leave behind, rather than leaving them for others to clean up behind you.

You have to have a balance
Stevel
I don't think people don't want things to be the best they can be but, even if it means that some people suffer hardships because of things like asthma, you can't shut the nation down.

The problem isn't just that we have emissions we can control and should control and some we can't and still have a viable economy since man only contributes 1/2 of one percent of total greenhouse gas, but that we don't have a government that has the policies that would allow a proper balance.

Our consumers will shun the American made product that costs more due to emission control or safety regulations or higher taxes, or higher energy costs for clean energy supplies, etc. and buy the foreign goods that are made where the costs are lower.

You can't have emission controls that add to the prices of goods and then have consumers who have no loyalty to the U.S. shun those goods and buy the competitor's goods at lower prices.

Yet, as long as you have the system of government we have, you will never have the balance you need to have at least "as clean as possible" production and still compete. Our U.S. consumers care only about "self" and how much they can save by buying the lower priced goods that don't have "environmental" costs in the price.

Private vs. Government
First off, let's give the liberals some credit for targeting the private sector and not just the government.

Smaller government means more private responsibility. Record companies should voluntarily label music for kids and not government regulation.

If you are not in favor if liberals appealing to private individuals and companies then the alternate is bigger government.

At worst, this op-ed should have praised liberals for working private companies vs asking for government programs. While the notions may not be sound that they lobby for, at least they are lobbying the right audience.

Get a grip people. You are suppose to be conservatives. Act like it.

The ultimate exercise...
of CSR is obviously for US industry to move all manufacturing operations to China, which is exempt from Kyoto restrictions on CO2 emissions. The rest of you are trying to make this problem too cmplicated.

The ultimate exercise...
in CSR would be for US industry to move all manufacturing operations to China and/or India, which are exempt from Kyoto's carbon emissions limits.

The rest of you are just trying to make this whole issue too complicated.

How about
everybody take control of their own lives and accept some responsibility? What a novel concept! When are people going to learn that with all of this comes strings? Look at the companies that provide health care. Because they provide it they think they have a right to control what you eat, drink, smoke, and next how you live.

When did Americans quit becoming the master of their own fate?

Wrong
SteveL:
"In the late 1970s, Americans started preferring smaller, fuel-efficient cars when gasoline prices rose sharply. Then in the 1990s, when gasoline prices dropped sharply to low levels, Americans suddenly fell in love with big cars again--and this time SUVs got their shot."

Why did they start "preferring" poorly built, expensive to repair, uncomfortable, little automobiles? Because they were under assault from both sides. On the one side you had Japan, Inc, dumping their crappy cars on the U.S. market and subsidizing the auto makers' losses, and the U.S. gov't not only refusing to fight back, but browbeating the American public, as liberals love to do. Carter's "malaise speech" is a typical example of how our spirit was broken in the 70s.
By the 90s, we'd had a decade of President Reagan, and we'd started to believe in ourselves again, but by then it was too late. The U.S. auto industry was a mess, Japan et al dominated, and, surprise surprise, their cars got bigger, fancier and far more expensive (but still costly to repair.)
Our tastes didn't change... they WERE changed for us, by a liberal gov't and a liberal entertainment industry.





When
Lolo2, the answer is: about the time the television industry soared. When the liberals in the media and the liberals in the gov't could broadcast nonsense in a "reasonable" tone, leave out facts, distort facts, invent facts, and the American people, who always wanted to feel good about themselves, swallowed it all and changed their views. The liberals were always sheeple; the propoganda campaign merely spread the disease.

http://www.xtimports.com/text/watchman00.html
is a parable I wrote that tries to demonstrate the triumph of idiocy.
http://www.xtimports.com/text/watchman01.html
continues the lesson. I wish I could write better to get the point across better.
WASPS created the framework for the country. WASP values, held by the vast majority of citizens, built the country. Idiotic, communist notions about "equality" and "tolerance", broadcast endlessly over the media, replaced those values with guilt-ridden, self-hating indoctrination.

The one overriding goal, and common principle of all liberals is the control of other human beings. The only way you can do that is to convince them they are inferior, or, preferably, no darn good at all.


jdw
I will read your links. Thankyou!

Lolo2 writes: 08, 2007 2:43 PM
When did Americans quit becoming the master of their own fate?

DESKJOCKEY RESPONDS

When the first politician told them he'd steal their neighbors money to buy their vote. The Garden of Eden Utopia is irresistible. Everybody wants to live off the other guy’s labor and will love any master who offers it to them.

Ben Franklin, "Democracy will work until the people learn that they can vote themselves money out of the treasury."

Only a virtuous people are capable of freedom. As nations become corrupt and vicious, they have more need of masters.-Benjamin Franklin, in a letter April 17, 1787

In Philadelphia, a Mrs. Powel asked Dr. Franklin, "Well Doctor what have we got a republic or a monarchy? A republic, replied the Doctor, if you can keep it." September 18, 1787 Recorded by James McHEnry, one of Washington's aides, in his diary; published in the American Historical Review, XI [1906], 618. --Bartlett's Familiar Quotations, Sixteenth Edition, at 310:26,

"I am for doing good to the poor, but I differ in opinion of the means. I think the best way of doing good to the poor, is not making them easy in poverty, but leading or driving them out of it. In my youth I traveled much, and I observed in different countries, that the more public provisions were made for the poor, the less they provided for themselves, and of course became poorer. And, on the contrary, the less was done for them, the more they did for themselves, and became richer." --Benjamin Franklin




Deskjockey
Well said! There is a reason Ben Franklin is my favorite!

Deskjockey
Good quotes, and relevant, too.

Americans speak of "freedom" but never the obligations that secure that freedom. Libs believe that freedom is granted to the people by the government and can be restrained or even denied.

It won't be brown-shirted thugs shouting national-socialist diatribes this time around. It'll be politicians wearing coats and ties using a massive bureaucracy, aided by a complacent and ignorant populace, that will cause our next civil war.

To yavapaidiane
Re "When the free market is allowed to do its job, the consumer is king". Why don't you tell that to the parents of the children who died from using Chinese toothpaste and cough syrup?While you're at it, lay the same message on the owners of cats and dogs that died from eating Chinese petfood. And you might just mention the same to the millions of parents who have had to take away their children's (recalled) toys in the past couple of months.

The fact is, without government regulation of industry, only GREED is king.

lilly
Your examples are all from the the country with the greatest degree of government regulation/control/ownership of business in the world. It appears that government isn't the be all and end all, especially if government is corrupt and/or inept. In none of the cases you cite were the offending products produced to the specifications of the US corporate customers which contracted for their production.

Wrong arguments for good reason
CSR is a socialistic nonsense. A corporation can have only one goal, making money. The rest of Mr. Borelli meandering makes no sense.

Many Americans perceive their cars as an ego boost not as a practical mean of transportation. Marketers explore this mercilessly as it is easier to get more money on an emotional sale. The whole SUV phenomenon is built on irrational motives. In urban areas people drive mostly in traffic; to work and from work, and running some errands. There is no need for neither sport nor utility features.

Young people start families later, they have fewer children, there are many single person households, as well as growing number of empty nesters. When analyzing calmly what would be the best car for most urban people, the economy size station wagon, like Ford Focus station wagon, is the best choice.

From the perspective of a car manufacturer, it would be unwise to ignore buyers that want to pay a prime price for SUV, a car that they do not need, and often barely can afford. However it would be equally unwise to bet all the chips on this section of the market. This is what Ford did when abandoning Ford Focus station wagon. It does not take a genius to know that, despite some ups and downs, the price of oil going sharply up. The same, after fat years, there will be one’s that buyers would be looking for cars fitting their needs not boosting their ego. A smart car manufacturer would be always having a product appropriate for this turn of events. Ford failed to do this. The company leaders convinced themselves that station wagon cannot be sold, and that there is no way of making profit on small cars. They even did not try. TV ads showed how powerful F150 is, instead of presenting versatile conveniences of the Focus station wagon, as sometimes the size is not as important as what you can do with it.

If Ford had a good strategy, the problems that Mr. Borelli writes about would not exist.

Henryk A. Kowalczyk
http://www.henrykkowalczyk.com

Free Market vs. Responsibility
The Absolutists in the Free Market crowd really slay me.

In the automotive industry, for example, did free market principles drive development of the catalytic converter, air bags, and fuel economy standards? No.

In the energy sector, did utility companies take the initiative to develop the technology to burn coal more efficiently, and with less air pollution? Umm, no.

Did companies like W. R. Grace which dumped tons of hazardous chemicals into the soil voluntarily clean up their mess without outside pressure? Again, no.

If a corporation's only mandate is to maximize profits, no matter the ultimate cost, then who will represent the rest of us impacted by their sometimes irresponsible choices?

All choices have consequences. Corporations (and politicians, too) are not exempt.

JPMac
Has the invention of a car been commissioned by the wisdom of the government?

The problems that you mention result from the government regulations that in their essence always release corporations from some of their responsibilities. This is the reason they pay lobbyists so much.

Dropping hazardous chemicals into the soil anywhere always harms someone. On the basic constitutional grounds, the injured party can effectively sue for damages and stopping the pollution. No special regulations are needed.

In order to maximize its profits, a business never takes a risk of polluting environment without government’s blessing. What is going behind the curtain, public often learns too late. Eventually, the government issues new rules correcting their previous errors. As Ronald Reagan said, “Governments tend not to solve problems, only to rearrange them.”

Obviously, the solution is not in giving governments more powers to rearrange problems.

Henryk A. Kowalczyk
http://www.henrykkowalczyk.com


The ALGUR toilet save the world
JayPMac writes: 09, 2007 1:20 AM

Free Market vs. Responsibility

DESKJOCKEY RESPONDS

It is unfortunate about the converter, air bags and fuel standards, but that is the curse of giver-ment. Better we did not have these and have a more cost efficient, safer, market driven product.

For example did giver-ment force Toyota to make the Prius? Nope, it was a market place decision.

Raising the price of coal by enviro wacko payoffs, merely transferred the cost of energy and the environment from a market based efficient method to a bunch of dunces in DC. They also gave us the ALGUR toilet to save us from our poop.

W. R. Grace is simply a tort issue for those specifically impacted and requires no Fed interference. Possibly state interference could be argued to protect any state interest.

In short corporations still make profit decisions and many violate environment laws because it is economically prudent to do so and pay the fines. Those of us impacted need to sue them for the damages we sustain.

hak and I don't agree every day but we agree today.
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