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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsThe biggest business con of 2019: fleecing workers while bosses get rich
Robert Reich
"Corporate social responsibility is the second-biggest con of 2019 (Donald Trump remains in first place).
Consider Boeing, whose board just fired its CEO, Dennis Muilenburg, in order to restore confidence in the company moving forward as it works to repair relationships with regulators, customers, and all other stakeholders.
Restore confidence? Muilenburgs successor will be David Calhoun, who, as a longstanding member of Boeings board of directors, allowed Muilenburg to remain CEO for more than a year after the first 737 Max crash and after internal studies found that the jetliner posed an unacceptable risk of accident. It caused the deaths of 346 people.
Muilenburg raked in $30m in 2018. He could walk away from Boeing with another $60m. Boeing isnt the only large corporation with a confidence problem. Until his ouster, Muilenburg was a director of the Business Roundtable, an association of 192 CEOs of Americas largest corporations. With great fanfare last August, it announced a fundamental commitment to all of our stakeholders (emphasis in the original) and not just their shareholders.
The Roundtables commitment came in response to growing public distrust of big corporations, and proposals from several Democratic candidates to rein them in.
Another Business Roundtable director is Mary Barra, CEO of General Motors. Just weeks after making the commitment, and despite GMs hefty profits and large tax breaks, Barra rejected workers demands that GM raise their wages and stop outsourcing their jobs. Earlier in the year GM shut its giant assembly plant in Lordstown, Ohio.
About 50,000 GM workers then staged the longest auto strike in 50 years. They won a few wage gains but didnt save any jobs. Meanwhile, GMs stock has performed so well that Barra earned $22m last year.
Jeff Bezos, CEO of Amazon, is another member of the Business Roundtable. Just weeks after he made the commitment to all his stakeholders, Whole Foods, an Amazon subsidiary, announced it would be cutting medical benefits for its entire part-time workforce.
Jeff Bezos, CEO of Amazon, whose Whole Foods subsidiary cut medical benefits for all its part-time workers.
The annual saving to Amazon from this cost-cutting move is roughly what Bezos whose net worth is $110bn makes in two hours. (Bezoss nearly completed DC mansion will have 2 elevators, 25 bathrooms, 11 bedrooms, and a movie theater.)
GEs CEO Larry Culp is also a member of the Business Roundtable. Two months after he made the commitment to all his stakeholders, General Electric froze the pensions of 20,000 workers in order to cut costs. Culp raked in $15m last year.
Last week the Business Roundtable issued a widely advertised Christmas message. It asserted that the success of the American economy depends on businesses investing in the economic security of their employees and the communities in which they operate.
Sure. Just in time for the holidays, US Steel announced 1,545 layoffs at two plants in Michigan. Last year, five US Steel executives received an average compensation package of $4.8m, a 53% increase over 2017.
Instead of a holiday bonus this year, Walmart offered its employees a 15% store discount. Oh, and did I say? Walmart saved $2.2bn this year from the Trump tax cut.
The tax cut itself was a product of the Roundtables extensive lobbying, lubricated by its generous campaign donations. Several of its member corporations, including Amazon and General Motors, wound up paying no federal income taxes at all last year.
The only way to make corporations socially responsible is through laws requiring them to be
Not incidentally, the tax cut will result in less federal money for services on which Americans and their communities rely.
The truth is, American corporations are sacrificing workers and communities as never before, in order to further boost record profits and unprecedented CEO pay.
Americans know this. In the most recent Pew survey, a record 73% of US adults (including 62% of Republicans, and 71% of Republicans earning less than $30,000 a year) said they believed major corporations had too much power. And 65% believed they made too much profit.
The only way to make corporations socially responsible is through laws requiring them to be for example, giving workers a bigger voice in corporate decision-making, making corporations pay severance to communities they abandon, raising corporate taxes, busting up monopolies, and preventing dangerous products (including faulty airplanes) from ever seeing the light of day.
If the Business Roundtable and other corporations were truly socially responsible, theyd support such laws. Dont hold your breath. The only way to get such laws enacted is by reducing corporate power and getting big money out of politics. The first step is to see corporate social responsibility for the con it is.
https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2019/dec/29/boeing-amazon-business-ethics-robert-reich
ChubbyStar
(3,191 posts)K&R!
Hermit-The-Prog
(33,414 posts)The primary purpose of a government formed by the people is to protect the people. This includes protection from predation, whether from within or without.
smirkymonkey
(63,221 posts)So eventually, there will be nobody and nothing left to protect us from predatory oligarchs who have to have ALL the money and sadistic right-wingers who just want to see people who aren't like them suffer.
Ohiogal
(32,057 posts)dalton99a
(81,570 posts)OhNo-Really
(3,985 posts)CrispyQ
(36,509 posts)(Bezoss nearly completed DC mansion will have 2 elevators, 25 bathrooms, 11 bedrooms, and a movie theater.)
Instead of a holiday bonus this year, Walmart offered its employees a 15% store discount. Oh, and did I say? Walmart saved $2.2bn this year from the Trump tax cut.
The truth is, American corporations are sacrificing workers and communities as never before, in order to further boost record profits and unprecedented CEO pay.
Saw this on FB a few days ago:
smirkymonkey
(63,221 posts)Grrrr!
Hermit-The-Prog
(33,414 posts)Sherman A1
(38,958 posts)Corporations should be trusted just about as far as you can throw them, which is not at all.
They deserve less than zero trust and should be regulated into the dirt.
CrispyQ
(36,509 posts)All other non-living entities, such as labor unions, non-incorporated businesses, churches, civics groups, and governments, only have the privileges that WE grant them. But corporations have Constitutional rights, just like people. But corporations don't need the things that people need, like clean air, fresh water, healthy food, health care, child/elder care, education, or even an environment that supports them. Corporations can "live" forever. Their longevity, money, and power amplify their rights.
We have let the corporations turn our citizens into profit-centers and debt-slaves. We are all just cogs in the corporate machine, who's only agenda is to churn out profit. Corporations are not people, but they have used the 14th Amendment to claim the same rights as living, breathing human beings. These are the entities that a number of Congress serves, not We the People.
Slavery is the fiction that people are property.
Corporate personhood is the fiction that corporations are people.
Reclaim Democracy's Corporate Personhood page There's some really good reading here.
scarletwoman
(31,893 posts)Dukkha
(7,341 posts)He is Mr. Burns, Gordon Gecko, Lex Luthor, Henry Potter, and Rich Uncle Pennybags all rolled into one. He doesn't even try to masquerade himself as an honest businessman or philanthropist. Just sits on his $400m yacht, swirling his brandy sifter, and tossing silver dollar coins into a sewage river because it gives him pleasure to watch his peasants dive for them.
Of course Americans in their typical shortsightedness and selfish convenience give Bezos and the Waltons all the wealth & power while destroying their own local economies in the process. We are locked in the second Gilded age now ruled by Corporatocracy.
pwb
(11,287 posts).
Martin Eden
(12,875 posts)"...is through laws requiring them to be."
They talk the talk, but they won't walk the walk unless compelled to do so.
KPN
(15,650 posts)we are and have always over the past 40+ years been adequately anesthetized with easy credit, ever more affordable mind-numbing or pacifying consumer goods, cheap processed food, etc., to become and remain passive in the face of gross inequities. Keeping enough of the masses comfortable keeps a lid on popular unrest/rebellion.