Title: The Social Responsibility of Business
1The Social Responsibility of Business
Marta Kahancová Amsterdam School for Social
Science Research University of Amsterdam The
Netherlands
2Business Ethics / Corporate Social Responsibility
The concern of business organizations for the
society Public expectations towards the business
community The concern of business and the public
regarding the relationship between business and
the society in a particular socio-cultural
environment Commonly accepted social norms on
ethical and socially responsible ways of
conducting business affairs
3Important aspects in BE / CSR
Definitions History of the CSR concept Theoretical
approaches to CSR Operationalization of CSR
practices varieties of CSR Effectiveness of CSR
practices Monitoring and Regulating CSR
practices Challenges and dilemmas for CSR
initiatives
4Defining BE / CSR
- A socially responsible firm is one whose
managerial staff balances a multiplicity of
interests. Instead of striving only for larger
profits for its stockholders, a responsible
enterprise also takes into account employees,
suppliers, dealers, local communities, and the
nation (Johnson 1971 50). - Purely voluntary corporate expenditures marginal
returns to the corporation are less than returns
from alternative expenditures (Manne and
Wallich, 1972 4-6) - An element of voluntarism in action corporation
is at least in some measure a free agent and as
such may exercise CSR beyond the social
objectives imposed by law (Manne and Wallich,
1972 40).
5History of the CSR Concept
- Formal writings on CSR are largely a product of
the 20th century, most evident in the United
States - 1950s Bowen (1953) argued that large businesses
were vital centers of power and decision making
and the actions of these firms touched the lives
of citizens. CSR contains an important truth that
must guide business in the future - 1960s attempts to formalize what CSR means
- 1970s new definitions focus on multiplicity of
business interests (compatibility of profit with
other interests) - 1980s operationalization of the CSR concept,
more research - 1990s CSR in a broader context (institutional,
organizational, managerial discretion)
6Theoretical Approaches to BE / CSR
- Economic / utilitarian perspective the social
responsibility of business is to make profits
(Friedman, 1971) social responsibility
long-run profit maximization (Johnson, 1971) - Philanthropic employers concerns for the
society beyond own profitability (company
values) moral incentives to act as good
citizens - Employers seeking societal legitimacy and
responding to societal and environmental
pressures organizations external to the firm
place new demands on business (civil society,
NGOs, consumers, investors)
7Theoretical Approaches to BE / CSR
- Socially aware profit maximizers
social responsibility is more of
an attitude, of the way in which a manager
approaches his decision-making task, than a great
shift in the economics of decision-making. It is
a philosophy that looks at the social interest
and the enlightened self-interest of business
over the long run as compared with the narrow,
unrestrained short-run self-interest (Steiner,
1971 164) - Adding value to the enterprise,
incorporating ethical issues into business brings
a range of benefits for all involved individuals
and organizations (Kahancova 2006, 2007)
8Varieties of CSR
- Single and multi-company initiatives, hybrid
partnerships - Voluntary codes of conduct regulate behavior
and labor standards of a single firm or of
several supply chain participants possible
response to problems in developing/enforcing
effective multilateral regulation - Social labeling programs by companies, NGOs,
international organizations, trade unions (I.e.
Clean Clothes Campaign, Fair Trade, Responsible
Care) - Shareholder and investor initiatives to influence
company behavior leverage of socially
responsible investment (investment fund screening
prior to purchasing company stocks, exclusion
from investment portfolios)
9Example Voluntary Codes of Conduct in
Multinational Firms
- Guiding the behavior of firms vis-à-vis
employees ensuring honest dealing, fair
treatment, general integrity of the organization - Labor content of Codes (Diller 1999 review of
215 codes) - Occupational health and safety (75 of codes)
- Discrimination in hiring and employment
conditions (66) - Elimination of child labor (45)
- Reasonable wage levels (40)
- Prevention of forced labor (25)
- Freedom of association and collective bargaining
(15)
10Benefits from Voluntary Codes of Conduct
- For companies
- Being under corporate control
- Subject to internal compliance procedures
- Avoiding extra-territorial impact of legislation
contribute to shaping legislation or public
regulation - Reflecting consumer choice responding to
consumer demands - Reflecting purchaser choice various sourcing
options and negotiable conditions -
- Where other parties are involved (i.e. trade
unions or NGOs) corporate control may be diluted
11Implementing Codes of Conduct
- Establishing commitment at the top
- Integrating ethical issues into the broader
conduct of the business communication, diffusion
of ethical policies into business functions (i.e.
quality assurance, compliance in suppliers) - Identifying and developing personnel competencies
and resources to implement a plan - Effective communication to target groups via PR
-
In practice the ethical function of business is
barely into its first generation most visible
are codes in large production and retail firms in
international trade
12Effectiveness of CSR Initiatives
- If corporate efforts are to be declared a
success, need to be engaged with and convince
NGOs, trade unions, governments, employees,
shareholders, socially aware consumers - Codes of conduct with the involvement of external
actors may acquire a higher degree of external
acceptance and legitimacy
- Research evidence (food, retail and apparel
sectors) - not enough sustainable solutions yet
- ad-hoc basis for addressing ethical concerns,
need to develop more systematic and operational
plans
13Monitoring and Regulating
Ethical Business Behavior
- Regulation via the market (shareholders, market
competition) - Non-market regulation (laws, rules, pressure from
the society, international organizations, NGOs) - Cooperative vs. non-cooperative monitoring by
external actors
Drawing corporations into dialogue to persuade
them by means of ethical and prudential
arguments to practice ethical behavior (i.e.
supplement to collective bargaining) More
adversarial stance of confronters who believe
that corporations will act only when financial
interests are threatened (i.e. boycotts,
protests, court cases)
14Conclusion Challenges and Dilemmas
- Enforcement of sustainable ethical behavior
voluntary or normative? (laws vs. market
pressures/company values) - Which actors should possess the power to define
and develop ethical standards consumers/civil
society/governments vs. multinational
firms/business organizations/investors - Self-reinforcing mechanism not underlined by law
priority of business interests over interests
of other social actors? - Social responsibility vs. profits complementary
or in conflict? - The future of Codes improvements in
operationalization, implementation, monitoring,
feedback from the society
15Conclusion Challenges and Dilemmas
- Regulating and monitoring ethical behavior
strengthening global external normative
regulation/monitoring (WTO, NGOs, governments),
or voluntary interest-driven initiative of firms
(single or multi-employer initiatives)? - Coordination of ethical initiatives among
businesses dominance of single-employer or
multi-employer actions? - Is it sustainable and desired to maintain the
stakeholder approach in business ethics in a
shareholder-driven economy?
16References and Literature
Available upon request at kahancova_at_hotmail.com T
el. 49 228 227 5407