Joseph Stiglitz, Can We Trust CEOs’ Shock Conversion to Corporate Benevolence?
Joseph Stiglitz
An apparent move by big business to maximise stakeholder value sounds too good to be true[Editor’s note: As I observed in “Are Corporations Inherently Immoral?” (9 October 2015), the modes of operation that tend to maximize profits include (a) decreasing the cost of natural resources
by, for example, (i) exploiting the environment, (ii) converting public land to private use, and (iii) evading the expenses of pollution cleanup or costs of environmental restoration; (b) decreasing the cost of human labor by, for example, (i) paying minimal wages, (ii) offering minimal benefits (health coverage, dental plans, and such), and (iii) opposing the organization or diminishing the influence of labor unions that engage in collective bargaining.]
or four decades, the prevailing doctrine in the US has been that corporations should maximise shareholder value – meaning profits and share prices – here and now, come what may, regardless of the consequences to workers, customers, suppliers and communities. So the statement endorsing stakeholder capitalism, signed earlier this month by virtually all the members of the US Business Roundtable, has caused quite a stir. After all, these are the CEOs of the US’s most powerful corporations, telling Americans and the world that business is about more than the bottom line. That is quite an about-face. Or is it?
The free-market ideologue and Nobel laureate economist Milton Friedman was
influential not only in spreading the doctrine of shareholder primacy,
but also in getting it written into US legislation. He went so far as
to say:
“There is one and only one social responsibility of business – to use
its resources and engage in activities designed to increase its
profits.”
The irony was that shortly after Friedman promulgated
these ideas, and around the time they were popularised and then
enshrined in corporate governance laws – as if they were based on sound
economic theory – Sandy Grossman and I, in a series of papers in the
late 1970s, showed that shareholder capitalism did not maximize societal
welfare.
This is obviously true when there are important
externalities such as climate change or when corporations poison the air
we breathe or the water we drink. And it is obviously true when they
push unhealthy products such as sugary drinks that contribute to
childhood obesity or painkillers that unleash an opioid crisis, or when
they exploit the unwary and vulnerable, like Trump University and so
many other American for-profit higher education institutions. And it is
true when they profit by exercising market power, as many banks and
technology companies do.
It is even true more generally. The market can drive
firms to be shortsighted and make insufficient investments in their
workers and communities. So it is a relief that corporate leaders, who
are supposed to have penetrating insight into the functioning of the
economy, have finally seen the light and caught up with modern
economics, even if it took them some 40 years to do so.
But do these corporate leaders really mean what they
say or is their statement just a rhetorical gesture in the face of a
popular backlash against widespread misbehaviour? There are reasons to
believe that they are being more than a little disingenuous.
Joseph Stiglitz. (photo: Virginia Mayo/AP)
The first responsibility of corporations is to pay
their taxes, yet among the signatories of the new corporate vision are
the country’s leading tax avoiders, including Apple, which, according to
all accounts, continues to use tax havens such as Jersey. Others
supported the US president Donald Trump’s 2017 tax bill, which slashes
taxes for corporations and billionaires, but, when fully implemented,
will raise taxes on most middle-class households and lead to millions
more losing their health insurance. This in a country with the highest
level of inequality, the worst healthcare outcomes and the lowest life expectancy among
major developed economies. And while these business leaders championed
the claim that the tax cuts would lead to more investment and higher
wages, workers have received only a pittance. Most of the money has been
used not for investment but for share buybacks, which served merely to
line the pockets of shareholders and the CEOs with stock-incentive
schemes.
A genuine sense of broader responsibility would lead
corporate leaders to welcome stronger regulations to protect the
environment and enhance the health and safety of their employees. And a few car companies –
Honda, Ford, BMW and Volkswagen – have done so, endorsing stronger
regulations than those the Trump administration wants, as the president
works to undo the former president Barack Obama’s environmental legacy.
There are even soft-drink company executives who appear to feel bad
about their role in childhood obesity, which they know often leads to
diabetes.
But while many CEOs may want to do the right thing –
or have family and friends who do – they know they have competitors who
don’t. There must be a level playing field, ensuring that firms with a
conscience aren’t undermined by those that don’t. That’s why many
corporations want regulations against bribery as well as rules
protecting the environment and workplace health and safety.
Unfortunately, many of the mega-banks, whose
irresponsible behaviour brought on the 2008 global financial crisis, are
not among them. No sooner was the ink dry on the 2010 Dodd-Frank
financial reform legislation, which tightened regulations to make a
recurrence of the crisis less likely, than the banks set to work to
repeal key provisions. Among them was JPMorgan Chase, whose CEO is Jamie
Dimon, the current president of the Business Roundtable. Not
surprisingly, given America’s money-driven politics, banks have had
considerable success. A decade after the crisis, some are still fighting
lawsuits brought by those who were harmed by their irresponsible and
fraudulent behaviour. Their deep pockets, they hope, will enable them to
outlast the claimants.
The new stance of the most powerful CEOs in the US is,
of course, welcome. But we will have to wait and see whether it’s
another publicity stunt, or whether they really mean what they say. In
the meantime, we need legislative reform. Friedman’s thinking not only
handed greedy CEOs a perfect excuse for doing what they wanted to do all
along but also led to corporate-governance laws that embedded
shareholder capitalism in the US legal framework and that of many other
countries. That must change, so that corporations are not just allowed
but actually required to consider the effects of their behaviour on
other stakeholders.
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