Title: Social Responsibility and Business
1Social Responsibility and Business
St. Francis Xavier University
- Featuring Milton Friedman
2Introduction
- On her deathbed, Gertrude Stein is purported to
have asked her lifelong companion Alice B.
Toklas, What is the answer? When Alice could
not bring herself to speak, Gertrude asked, In
that case, what is the question?
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3The purpose of this class
- To introduce the concepts of business ethics and
social responsibility - To address the questions
- What do we mean by social responsibility?
- Does a firm have a social responsibility?
- What is this responsibility?
- To explore the ideas of Milton Friedman
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4Definitions
- Ethics
- Individual standards, moral values or beliefs
about what is right and wrong or good and bad
(58), - Managerial Ethics
- standards of behaviour that guide individual
managers in their work (61)
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5Social Responsibility
- Social Responsibility
- A businesss collective code of ethical
behaviour toward the environment, its customers,
its employees and its investors (64) - The obligation to maximize its positive impact
and minimize its negative impact on society
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6Does a firm have a social responsibility?
- What does Milton Friedman think?
- It depends
- What type of business?
- Proprietor
- No division of legal entity
- Revenues/profits are personal income
- Proprietor can spend freely
- Corporation
- Separate legal entity owned by investors,
administered by a board of directors, managed by
executives - Revenues/profits/assets belong to ownership
(investors) - Thus, Friedman distinguishes between the type of
business and focuses his discussion on
corporations
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7Does a firm have a social responsibility?
- No a corporation is an artificial entity only
people have a social responsibility - What is the purpose of corporations / business?
- Market mechanisms are the appropriate way to
allocate scarce resources, not political
mechanisms (Key Principle)
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8Concept Test
- The form of ownership is central to Friedmans
position about corporate social responsibility
because - Corporations, with access to more resources, have
a greater responsibility - Executives owe it to their investors to act
socially responsibly - Executives should conduct business in accordance
with the desires of stockholders - Corporations are in a good position to understand
the needs of society based on their interaction
with customers
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9Does a firm have a social responsibility?
- What is the role of executives who work for
corporations? - Corporate executives act as the agent to
ownerships wishes (maximize profits). Their
responsibility is to conduct the business in
accordance with their desires - How can executives decide to be socially
responsible with other peoples money? - To do so takes time, money and resources away
from that which ownership has hired them to do. - If executives want to act responsibly, do so
with their personal income - Individual shareholders are the only ones who
know best how to be socially responsible - Are corporate executives the appropriate
executors of social programs? (Key Consequence) - Interview with Milton Friedman
http//www.youtube.com/watch?vivLIA25FQYY
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10Concept Test
- According to Friedman, the use of corporate funds
that promote the firm while giving back to
society (e.g. supporting local childrens sports)
are - Important, because Corporations, with access to
more resources, have a greater responsibility - Necessary because Executives owe it to their
investors to act socially responsibly - Relevant because Corporations are in a good
position to understand the needs of society based
on their interaction with customers - Potentially fraudulent, because they advance the
interests of the business under the guise of
charity
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11Does a firm have a social responsibility?
- What about activities that contribute to society
while generating profits? E.g.Ronald McDonald
house or Timbit hockey / soccer - The doctrine of social responsibility is
frequently a cloak for actions that are justified
on other grounds rather than a reason for those
actions - The firms positive impact (i.e. social
responsibility) is also effective promotion
(awareness-raising which leads to sales) and
profitable (reduces taxes). - Is this social responsibility or business acumen?
- Friedman suggests these are tactics as
approaching fraud
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12Does a firm have a social responsibility?
- and threaten the principles of free markets
- The use of the cloak of social
responsibilitydoes clearly harm the foundations
of a free societyit helps to strengthen the
already too prevalent view that the pursuit of
profits is wicked and immoral and must be curbed
and controlled by external forces. Once this
view is adopted, the external forces that curb
the market will not be the social consciences,
however highly developed, of the pontificating
executives it will be the iron fist of
Government bureaucrats - In an ideal free market resting on private
property, no individual can coerce any other, all
cooperation is voluntary, all parties to such
cooperation benefit or they need not participate.
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13What is the firms social responsibility?
- According to Friedman, the responsibility of
corporations is to make a profit - They must do so while conforming to the basic
rules of society, both those embodied in law and
those embodied in ethical custom. - Video http//www.youtube.com/watch?vW3Seg0JE1PM
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14What is the firms social responsibility?
- Caveat
- Friedman writes that I share Adam Smiths
skepticism about the benefits that can be
expected from those who affected to trade for
the public good - The political principle that underlies the
political mechanism is conformity. The
individual must serve a more general social
interestthe individual may have a vote and a say
in what is to be done, but if he is overruled, he
must conform. It is appropriate for some to
require others to contribute to a general social
purpose whether they wish to or not.
Unfortunately, unanimity is not always feasible.
There are some respects in which conformity
appears unavoidable, so I do not see how one can
avoid the use of the political mechanism
altogether.
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15Misconceptions of Friedman
- Friedman advocates greed
- Friedman advocates a free market system through
which individuals and companies in society aim to
achieve prosperity and efficient use of scarce
resources based on a vested self-interest - Freedom of choice is central to Friedmans view
- Friedman advocates amorality
- Individuals and companies must uphold the legal
and moral norms of society - Individuals should practice morality (i.e. as the
principal) - A business is a separate legal entity, subject to
the laws that society creates, but not a moral
entity like a person - Friedmans value-contribution is that he
challenges us to critically examine our
assumptions about an increasingly popular
ideology
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16Critique
- Does the existence of illegal corporate activity
(e.g. pp 57-58 re Enron and World Com) refute
Friedmans views? - Investor demand for socially responsible firms
had led to new investment opportunities that are
market and CSR driven - The advent of advanced forms of communication
technology enables active exchange among
shareholders and management
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17Admin
- Monday
- A discussion of corporate social responsibility
featuring The Corporation - Wednesday
- Chapter 3
- Quiz
- Friedman reading
- Chapter 3
- Overview of Presentations
- Friday Nov 21 Reports Due
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