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Business and the Environment2

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Implies that the firm is in an oligopoly or less competitive industry. ... Oligopoly. Few firms. Differentiated products. Lower price elasticity of demand. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Business and the Environment2


1
Business and the Environment2
  • Lecture 2 Drivers of manager decision making
    within firmsstake holders, market
    structure/conditions.
  • Understand the pressures and conditions that
    affect managerial decisions regarding
    environmental efforts.
  • Firm objective to maximize profits Problem areas
    that affect firm behavior and responses to the
    environment.
  • Two key problems

2
Business and the Environment
  • Agency problems. Deviation of management from
    share owner interests. Social Responsibility of
    business debate.
  • Problem of uninternalized benefits and costs in
    profit maximization.
  • The source of the environmental and natural
    resource problem.
  • We will return to this issue in more depth
    because it is central to the environmental
    problem.
  • How to link environmental action to firm
    profitability?

3
Business and the Environment
  • Other factors affecting firm managers as they
    consider environmental issues.
  • Internal decision making
  • Trade offs on products within profit constraints.
  • Trade offs on short/long term, RD
  • Revenue enhancement via market research and new
    offerings
  • Cost containment via lifecycle analysis and
    supply chain management

4
Business and the Environment
  • Drivers of environmental positions.
  • Hoffman slide (Hoffman, 2000, p. 17).
  • Regulatory
  • Tax
  • Regulation
  • Market instruments
  • Uncertainty
  • Efforts to mold policy and gain a strategic
    advantage
  • We will return to this issue with regard to GHG
    regulation and other environmental policies.

5
Business and the Environment
  • Drivers Financial resourceinvestors, insurance
    companies, banks
  • Risk to insurance companies for liability for
    environmental damages. Strict liability
    negligence rules. Depends on how the law is
    structured.
  • Nuisance actions.defend the right to use ones
    property free from disturbances or influence from
    activities created by others (externalities).

6
Business and the Environment
  • Negligence actions.defend against injury due to
    loss of due care. Standards? Was due care
    applied? Changes in polluttee behavior.
    Precaution.
  • Strict liabilityPolluter pays. Liable for
    damages to third parties, even if they could not
    be avoided with due care. Used when there is a
    likelihood of great harm. Incentive effects.
    Polluters consider costs. May over compensate.
    Pollutees do not consider costs.

7
Business and the Environment
  • Risk to investors if unready for policy or policy
    is harmful.
  • Risk to investors. Due diligence for
    environmental damages that could place the loan
    at risk.
  • Environmental performance proxies for overall
    performance.
  • TXU case.

8
Business and the Environment
  • Drivers Consumers
  • Willingness to pay of some market segments
  • Changes in taste.
  • High incomes.
  • High education levels
  • This is a fundamental challengemarket
    differentiationmarket segmentation, determining
    willingness to pay, barriers to entry.

9
Business and the Environment
  • Which consumer groups will be concerned about
    environmental quality?Segment markets by gender,
    age, education, ethnicity, location, income,
    urban/rural, north/south, political affiliation
  • Core competencies of a firmhow to match with
    environmental differentiation?
  • Will return to this issue.
  • Major strategy issue for firms.

10
Business and the Environment
  • Drivers Competitors
  • Lose competitive position vis a vis competitors
    who more rapidly and credibly respond to market
    demand for environmental action.
  • Alternatively gain competitive advantage vis a
    vis competitors who do not meet new demands.
    First mover.
  • Toyota-General Motors example.

11
Business and the Environment
  • Drivers Trade Associations and other forms of
    collective action.
  • Use norms, rules for members to follow.
  • Group certification. Reputation. Industry wide.
    Larger firms are most active-why?

12
Business and the Environment
  • May preempt government regulation.
  • Might be preferable to industrymore industry
    specific, more flexible, more focused, less
    uncertain, less risk, more discretion.
  • May be less regulation than society desires, but
    if lower cost and more effective may be superior
    to government regulation.
  • Customers might benefit if more flexible and
    lower cost.

13
Business and the Environment
  • Can force higher costs on competitorsusually
    incumbents gain advantages over smaller new
    entrants. There are differences in compliance
    costs. Upfront, fixed costs that can be spread
    across larger output in larger firms.
  • Examples
  • Chemical Manufacturers AssociationResponsible
    Care.

14
Business and the Environment
  • Motivation
  • crises. Bhopal, Love Canal, PCBs in the Hudson
    River.
  • A series of federal actions1976 Toxic Substance
    Control Act and Resource Conservation and
    Recovery Act. Empowered EPA to regulate. 1980
    Superfund Law with joint and several liability
    for industrial wastes. Ex post liability for
    entire cleanup costs.
  • Industry fears more.

15
Business and the Environment
  • 1984 RC launched.
  • Largest firms.
  • Provided motivation for public good provision
    without government regulation.
  • Focus on management practices not numerical
    targets (why?).
  • Action plans to implement management
    codesemergency response, pollution prevention,
    safety, health, product stewardship,
    distribution.
  • Various studies of its effectiveness.

16
Business and the Environment
  • Other examples Forest Stewardship Council (FSC)
    founded by environmental groups and Sustainable
    Forestry Initiative (SFI), founded by industry
    groups.
  • SFI 1994 by American Forest and Paper Assn.
  • Largest companies advocates. Some small.
  • Crisesconcerns about land management practices.

17
Business and the Environment
  • Collective action to set up principles and action
    plans. Some defection among smaller firms over
    costs.
  • Less world wide coverage. Differences in land
    management and forestry practices around the
    world. Harder to have uniform regulations.
  • Issues of how strict are the rules and coverage.

18
Business and the Environment
  • Drivers Suppliers
  • Risk of lost business when suppliers are linked
    to one or two producers.
  • Alternatively, supply chain managementfirm seeks
    to avoid problems with suppliers in supply chain.
    Damage product or service reputation in the
    market. Firms can require that their suppliers
    adhere to certain environmental standards

19
Business and the Environment
  • Risk in this, with competition if it raises cost,
    so that firms in perfectly competitive markets
    may not be responsive.
  • Green supply chainworks if there are cost
    advantages. Firm can appropriate some of the
    social benefits. Implies that the firm is in an
    oligopoly or less competitive industry.

20
Business and the Environment
  • Drivers NGOs
  • Can be influential interest groupsboth as a
    market segment and as a political force.
  • Hoffman, 2000, p. 107, 108.
  • Source of legal challenges. Uncertainty. Time
    costs.
  • Cooperate. Place on Board of Directors, etc.
  • Cooperate in design of policy. Environmental
    Defense.

21
Business and the Environment
  • Alliances with NGOs
  • Corporate sponsorship
  • Firm contributes to the environmental group
    financially or in kind through becoming involved
    in specific environmental causes or fund raising
  • NGO provides product endorsement
  • Task force to develop economically feasible
    solutions for the greening of business practices

22
Business and the Environment
  • Perceived crisis and shortcomings of adversarial
    approaches to problem solving
  • Lawsuits might take years and results in greater
    costs
  • Problems that are so complex that they require
    multiple actors to solve them, disagreement over
    solution,
  • Environmental groups may have expertise and
    public support but lack power of implementing
    solution

23
Business and the Environment
  • Firm perspective
  • Access to complementary assets
  • Credibility
  • Additional communication channels
  • Scientific knowledge
  • NGO perspective
  • Direct impact on firms behavior, potential
    ripple effect within industry

24
Business and the Environment
  • Firm perspective
  • Negative backlash if the project fails
  • Confidentiality issues
  • How to retain the Intellectual property rights?
  • NGO perspective
  • Open to criticism that is becomes and ally of
    industry (sleeping with the enemy)
  • Open to criticism that it looses neutrality

25
Business and the Environment
  • Ability of the parties to provide complementary
    assets.
  • Keep alliance based on subjects that are far from
    firms IP (packaging for McDonalds)
  • Clear definition of objectives
  • Maintain an arms length relationship formal
    contract

26
Business and the Environment
  • Other drivers
  • Employeesmotivation and company culture.
  • Press and other mediamold demand.
  • Religiousmold taste regarding the environment.

27
Business and the Environment
  • Academyresearch on impact. Information.
  • Global warming concerns, water, waste, energy
  • Ozone layer. Mario J. Molina F. Sherwood
    Rowland, Stratospheric Sink for
    Chlorofluoromethanes Chlorine Atomic Catalyzed
    Destruction of Ozone, 249 Nature 810, 810 (1974).
    Helped to galvanize firm support for regulation
    and Montreal Protocol.

28
Business and the Environment
  • Firms face market pressures as they consider
    responding to environmental problems.
  • Overall market considerations. Market slide
  • Demand issues.
  • Price elasticity of demand.
  • Want it to be less than one.
  • Which markets will satisfy this condition?

29
Business and the Environment
  • Market segments have different willingness to
    paytaste and income.
  • Price discrimination (where different prices are
    charged to different consumer groups) depends
    upon competitive conditions.
  • We will examine these in more detail as part of
    market structure.

30
Business and the Environment
  • Supply issues.
  • Cost of responding.
  • Innovation options.
  • Input costs and past contracts may limit options.
  • Government policiessubsidies, tax, regulation.
  • Productivity, cost and firm size. Returns to
    scale, constant cost, increasing cost. Small
    firms may have fewer options? Or be more flexible.

31
Business and the Environment
  • Market structure as it affects firm response.
  • Competitive
  • many firms, many very close substitutes, ease of
    entry, consumer power, high price elasticity,
    pressure on price and cost.
  • Trade. Globalization.
  • In such markets firms may be reluctant to adopt
    environmental products or processes. Why?

32
Business and the Environment
  • Monopolistic competition.
  • Many firms, somewhat differentiated products.
  • Ease of entry.
  • More market segmentation possible.
  • Mass retail.
  • Possibly limited individual firm response to
    environmental pressures. Why?

33
Business and the Environment
  • Oligopoly.
  • Few firms.
  • Differentiated products.
  • Lower price elasticity of demand.
  • More power over price and output. Price
    discrimination possible.
  • Market segmentation.
  • Firms may be more responsive to environmental
    demands. Why?

34
Business and the Environment
  • Monopoly.
  • One firm.
  • Differentiated products.
  • Price discrimination.
  • Low price elasticity of demand.
  • Market segmentation.
  • Firm may or may not be responsive to
    environmental demands. Why?

35
Business and the Environment
  • Measures of market structure.
  • Concentration. Herfindahl indexsum of the
    squared market shares, HHI 0 to 10,000 (more
    concentrated). Affects competitive environment.
  • More differentiated, generally competitive
    markets are more likely to have firms that are
    responsive to environmental concerns.
  • Heterogeneity.
  • Non price competition. Differentiation.

36
Business and the Environment
  • We have covered
  • Drivers of environmental action by firm managers.
  • Market structure impact.
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