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Public expectations of corporations have undergone a profound
change during the last decade. Quality itself has moved from focusing
on products and services to quality of people, quality of environment
and quality of governance. Kenichi Ohmae in his book "The
Borderless World: Power and Strategy in the Interlinked Economy"
has defined the role of corporations as follows:
"A corporation is a social institution whose responsibilities
extend far beyond the wellbeing of its equity owners to giving
security and a good life to its employees, dealers, customers,
vendors and subcontractors. Their whole life hinges on the wellbeing
of the corporation."
Charles Handy says "a business is no longer just an economic
instrument, the principal purpose of a business is not to make
profit, full stop. It is to make a profit in order to continue
to do things and to do so even better and more abundantly."
This
is a far cry from what Milton Friedman said in 1970 - "the
social responsibility of a business is to increase profits".
The expectations of people from business have changed vastly over
the last few decades. In a millennium survey about 60% of those
polled stated that they will punish companies who were found to
damage environment. Today a company's market capitalisation depends
on how they take care of the social and environmental issues.
In this scenario a company that focuses on profit alone is certain
to make no profit. Companies that wish to create sustainable wealth
have to look after 3 things - people, profit and planet. This
is what is called a triple bottomline approach. In traditional
business one only watched a single bottomline i.e. reduction
of costs to maximise profits. This equation is now considered
inadequate. Companies have to look at society and environment
issues.
The
goal of business should not be confined simply to the creation
of financial wealth. Far more important is the human wealth, intellectual
wealth, reputational wealth and environmental wealth. Corporations
must aim to create significant impact on the society by reshaping
community values, attitudes and culture. Corporates can create
value for the society through several means; most of all is the
way they recruit and the way they treat their employees. Discharging
their corporate social responsibility through community health,
education and welfare scheme is value adding as it enhances the
human capital. Adding diversity to the work force and creating
gender balance not only enhances the quality of human capital
but also adds to the financial gains. In an economy driven by
innovation the only way to breed new ideas is by encouraging diverse
groups. It is only though the clashing of cultures and Ideas that
best solutions are found. It was in 1859 that Charles Darwin told
us that adding variety to crops improves yield. We are yet to
adopt it for human.
At
a recent lecture Joseph E. Stiglitz the noted Professor of Economics
at Columbia University & former Chief Economist of the World
Bank asserted that inequalities in developing countries have increased
by 2% since the Uruguay Round which founded WTO 10 years ago.
A recent FAO study on hunger reports that hunger is actually on
the rise and 18 million more people have slipped into hunger in
the second half of the decade.
India,
which is currently celebrating the 'feel-good' factor owing to
its remarkable economic performance, has added 33 millions to
the ranks of hungry in 2001-2002 alone. With 276 million people
living below the poverty line, India, recognised as a software
giant, has the dubious distinction of being a country with the
largest number of hungry people in the world. There has been a
paradox in the economic growth worldwide. The national economic
growth world over has not brought any increase in employment.
The jobless growth is adding millions unemployed to its already
expanding queues. Despite annualized growth of 8.4%, even the
US economy generated just 1000 jobs against the expectation of
150,000 this December. India's jobless has already exceeded 35
million.
All
this shows that the maxim of capitalism on which the globalisation
was based such as that the free markets would lead to universal
opulence through free competition spurring greater productivity
has not worked and we need to recast our strategies. Lester Thurow
wrote, nearly 40 years ago, in The Future of Capitalism, that,
'Paradoxically, at precisely the time when capitalism finds itself
with no social competitors - its former competitors, socialism
or communism, having died - it will
have to undergo a profound metamorphosis'.
While
poverty is increasingly depriving large populations the very basic
needs, the greed is pushing the envelope of corporate agenda.
There has been no remission from corporate scandals despite Sarbanes-Oxley
and Sir Derek. According to Sherrin Watkins, the Enron whistleblower,
the directors have still got their hands in the till. Last year
has witnessed value destruction in a whole lot of iconic enterprises
such as Skandia, Boeing, Hollinger and Parmalat. World's oldest
stock exchange NYSE has also not been spared. After defending
for months the obscene remunerations of £140 million that
it paid to its former chairman Richard Grasso, NYSE has decided
to join SEC in ordering investigation into Grasso's earnings.
The pay package will be investigated by famed New York Attorney
General Eliot Spitzer.
Skandia
provides a classic example of what can happen when strong management
is left unsupervised by a weak board and flawed auditing process.
As usual the management represented by former chief executive
Lars Eric Peterson and his deputy helped themselves to huge bonuses
and company perks while Skanllia share price plunged by 90%. Latest
to face SEC charges is another American icon IBM. Widening of
Parmalat probe has shown the involvement of even Bank of America
and Deutsche Bank, Germany's biggest bank. Here is a lesson that
investigations, unless carried out with full commitment and persistence,
do not unravel the magnitude of skullduggery.
American
mutual funds, a $ 7 trillion industry, known to be the saviours
of small investors were also caught by SEC while trying to make
a fast buck at the expense of small investors. Even UK's Invesco
was involved, raising the question once again as to why corporate
misdoings by the same institutions escape scrutiny in the UK.
SEC said it found 14 brokerage firms taking cash from mutual fund
advisers and 10 funds accepting payments in the form of brokerage
commission.
Corporate
mis-doing can do the greatest damage to this bullish market. Markets
have only begun to bring in the small investor after a long absence.
Not long ago 45% of those polled in a survey of potential investors
had said that stock markets are a sure way to ruin. Our most important
challenge, therefore, is to restore the credibility of the stock
market. Experience has indicated that mere box-ticking of corporate
governance codes does not help. Indeed it can be counter productive
because it gives you the illusion of things being in control.
Besides, this is an area which is already over legislated. Further
tightening of the rules as has been done by OECD improves the
form and not the substance. More focus needs to be given on monitoring
implementation. As Warren Buffett recently wrote to shareholders:
"The answer is not in inadequate laws ….but in what I would
call 'boardroom tmosphere'. When the compensation committee, helped
by a high-paid consultant, reports on a mega grant of options
to the CEO, it would be like belching at the dinner table for
a director to suggest that the committee reconsider." What
we really need is training of directors in boardroom skills of
how to intervene without raising a storm.
Now that the Indian companies have become global, one of the biggest
challenges is to ensure they have independent directors on the
board. Board independence is the cornerstone of good corporate
governance. Unfortunately government of India is still sitting
on the Naresh Chandra Committee report on the reforms in the composition
of boards to include independent directors. It is time that action
was taken on this report regardless of industry resistance. A
similar and stronger report submitted in the UK by Derek Higgs
also faced a lot of opposition from chairmen of FTSE100 companies.
It did not dissuade the UK government from implementing the report.
One of the reasons for corporate resistance is the committees
recommendation of involving women directors. It is a matter of
shame that among 2070 board directors of BSE 200 only 43 are women.
In today's economy womens are an opportunity not a threat. Women
have given a new dimension to wherever they have been involved.
It is time our boards realise what they are missing.
The
purpose of appointing independent non-executive directors is to
make them the watchdog of shareholders. There is the job to bring
objectivity and impartiality to the board's decision making. They
also widen the horizon of the board in formulating strategy, applying
both a wider general experience and any relevant special skill
and knowledge that the board may otherwise lack. Cronyism in the
appointment of non-executives and the cosines in the supervision
of board room pay can spell disaster to independence and make
a joke of non-executives. Non-executive directors are crucial
to maximisng effectiveness of the board and its time that the
process of recruiting independent directors is given as much importance
as appointment of a CEO. Ideally, appointment of both auditors
and non-executive directors needs to be made by a group or a vehicle,
which is independent of the board. The process needs to be made
a transparent as possible which is possible only if each appointment
is made through an appointment committee. This committee should
develop criteria for the appointment and engage an independent
search firm for recruitment.
Maximising
the shareholder's returns in a world of such disparities can be
most challenging. It is dangerous to focus on profits alone in
a world characterised by grueling poverty and squalor and build
islands of opulence and extravagance. Such disparities in an interconnected
economy pose the greatest threat to corporations and are time
bombs waiting to explode. Corporations can ignore them only at
their own peril. Their most important agenda, therefore, is to
bridge these disparities through a triple bottomline approach
focusing on people, profit and planet. The need for transparency,
equity, integrity, accountability and social responsibility in
such a situation is far more pronounced. It is certain that people
are not going to accept a second class status in the internet
world. People can stand poverty but not injustice. It is the corporates
who will suffer a backlash if disparities persist and are not
made good through market interventions. In this context the widening
differentials between the wages of an average worker and the CEO
are cause of deep concern warranting immediate corrective actions.
People
issues have come to the forefront. We are living a knowledge economy.
The value has shifted from capital to knowledge. Knowledge comes
from people. Valuing knowledge needs a change in the paradigm.
Though sharing has been emphasised all through in the management
literature, its impact has changed vastly at the onset of knowledge
economy. In the industrial economy if people shared things, in
the event of one party getting more then other party had to get
less. This is not so with the knowledge. Sharing of knowledge
brings gain to both sides. The quantity of gain depends on the
diversities of parties concerned. Greater the diversity, more
is the knowledge.
The
world today is beset with many serious problems. Some of them
are catastrophic. One such problem is the environmental damage
and global warming due to emissions of green house gases. It is
a pity that the President of world's biggest economy, US, is spending
enormous sums to prove otherwise. This is how Robert F. Kennedy
Jr. of Natural Resource Defence Council describes the US President's
response to environmental challenge:
"There
is no scientific debate in which the White House has cooked the
books more that of global warming. The Bush administration has
altered, suppressed or attempted to discredit close to a dozen
major reports on the subject. These include a 10 year study by
the International Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), commissioned
by the President's father in 1993 in his own efforts to dodge
what was already a virtual scientific consensus blaming industrial
emissions for global warming. After disavowing the Kyoto Protocol,
the Bush administration commissioned the federal government's
National Academy of Sciences to find holes in the IPCC's analysis.
This ploy backfired. The NAS not only confirmed the existence
of global warming and its connection to industrial greenhouse
gases; it also predicted that the effects of climate change would
be worse than previously believed, estimating the global temperature
will rise by between 2.5F and 10.4F by 2100. Bush reacted by launching
a $100m-10 years effort to prove that global temperature changes
have, infact, occurred naturally - another delay tactic for the
fossil fuel barons."
It
is now well known that the Iraq war was initiated primarily to
secure future supplies of oil. It was a highly short-sighted approach
aimed to defeat its very objective. Oil is not going to last for
more than 50 years. Huge oil imports of 11 million barrels a day
with forecast of 20 million barrels a day by 2005 are ripping
US economy and adding to its enormous deficit $1.5 billion a day.
It would have been so much better to spend these £57 billion
allocated for Iraq war in subsidizing the non-conventional energy
sources. This way US would have helped the world in finding a
lasting solution to the global warming problem and also balanced
its budget.
A
sweeping new computer-modelled study conducted by scientists from
14 laboratories covering six regions rich in bio-diversity such
a Mexico, Australia, Brazil, South America and Europe came to
the startling conclusion that more than one-third of 1103 nature
species like mammals, birds, reptiles, insects & plants could
become extinct in 50 years time. The reason is because greenhouse
gas emission from cars and factories could make earth hotter than
it has been 10 million years. Applying the same yardstick in other
regions means loss of one million species by 2050. Now if such
research is made fully public, i.e. if media publicises the fact
that cars are causing emissions that are destroying the Australian
lizard called Boyd's Forest Dragon, Europe's azure-winged magpie
and Mexico's Jico deer, most of the young purchasers would replace
their cars with bikes.
2003
was the third warmest year during the last 150 years. The other
two warmest years also were during the last 5 years. Antarctic
Ozone hole has expanded to an all time high. Arctic Sea ice has
touched a record low. This bad news on environment has its good
side. People will finally rally to the defence of environment.
Coming years are going to witness much greater respect for environment.
Lot of value will be created through corporate strategies based
on the theme of "return to nature". People will be willing
to pay taxes to protect bio-diversity. Company's market capitalisation
would depend on how they protect environment. An important trend
would be migration of economy from acquisition to an experience
based mode. Greater value will be created by intangibles that
would appeal to emotions than products.
One
recent poll found 95 percent of the American people agreeing with
a sentiment long shared in Europe and Asia: Corporations owe a
larger debt to society than simply making profit. One reason why
this is true is the growing recognition of an interdependent,
networked society in which business plays a key role. James Moore's
"business ecosystem" model, for example, along with
such concepts as industrial ecology, stress that corporations
are not narrow institutions distinct from the social contexts
in which they are embedded. The recognition among business leaders
that they cannot thrive if their surrounding ecology is perishing
is already leading many companies to broaden the scope of their
activities. "Ten years from now, I am firmly convinced,"
Moore has concluded, "business leaders will be actively and
daily addressing social and environmental issues."
The
role of business today is far more pervasive than ever before.
Its constituency is global. Power of the MNCs has arisen enormously
in the new era. There are over half a million foreign affiliate
corporations in the world. The largest 100 multinationals $2000
billion in foreign assets outstrip the combined GDP of China,
India, South Korea, Malaysia, Singapore and Philippines. Today
it is the economy that drives politics. It is the business that
drives governments. Business is shaping the social values and
also becoming a powerful cultural force. The political system
has failed to address the human problems of inequity, poverty
and terror. The governments of today and politicians particularly,
have lost the moral authority. For the first time in human history,
the business has the power to make a difference to human lives
and can fill the vacuum eminently.
In
the de-regulated digital economy, it is the business which drives
running the governments. The responsibility for removing these
disparities rests with the business. It is for business to realise
that in this era of knowledge economy if growth is not equitable
and shared, it cannot be sustained. It is the disparity that drives
people to desperation. People can live with poverty but not injustice.
India's advantage lies in its youngest population in the world.
54% of our population is below than age of 25 and largely unemployed.
These young people are not going to sit idly if India's growth
does not improve their prosperity.
Extending
your horizon to care for the long-term societal needs has to be
the key element of human effort and indeed the main challenge
to leadership at all levels in the 21st Century. This is what
is called stewardship. The fundamental role of leadership has
to shift from production at any cost to protecting the environment,
preserving natural resources and taking care biodiversity and
the ecosystems with a view to safeguarding the interests of future
generations. Sustaining efforts to improve quality of environment
calls for personal commitment. The question before us is how can
business be made to realise that a duty of care for our environment
and making a difference to the lives of disadvantaged and impoverished
can provide a deeper purpose to business?
Global
Corporations today have to face new geopolitical realities. Their's
has to be a global vision transcending parochial boundaries. As
their businesses expand and operations extend beyond their borders,
they have to expand their mindsets as well. Having cried hoarse
all along for minimising the government role in corporate agenda
they cannot bank on governments alone to solve the problem of
disparities. Businesses are the engines of today's progress and
have to become the drivers of change. They have to become aware
of the new challenges of managing diverse operations across continents
spanning different cultures and geographical locations amidst
resurgent geopolitics and heightened business volatility requiring
greater transparency and accountability. They have to realise
that their biggest challenge today lies in managing diversity
and bridging disparities. National governments driven by local
and parochial agendas have made a mess of it. It is now for the
business to drive the government agenda and engage with all stakeholders
and local communities to make them realise the benefits, proper
implementation of globalisation can bestow. They have to invest
in local communities and seek their trust. Capitalism has to channel
self-interest to achieve collective good for its own survival.
A focus on triple bottomline is the key to all this. In the triple
bottomline approach the social and environmental has to be incorporated
not as an add-on to a company's economic activities but as essential
and integral part of the strategic intent of the company linking
the business success with society. Alternative is chaos and anarchy.
*Dr Madhav Mehra is President of World Council
for Corporate Governance.
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