free hit counter code One SoCal Green: February 2006

Monday, February 27, 2006

Corporate Bashing II

Corporate bashing for sport just isn't Green. (See my previous post, A New Approach to Corporate Bashing ) But it is pretty irrefutable that the corporate structure is at the root of much -- but not all -- that is wrong and unwholesome about doing business in America.

I take it -- and I hope you will too -- as an unwritten part of the 10 Key Values that complaint without being part of the solution, or at least proposing and enabling solutions, isn't enough.

Grassroots democracy means that the grassroots not only gripe about what doesn't work, but help create a structure or institution or rule that does. What can we, a few simple Green grass-rootlets, do about a corporate world run amok?

First, A Reminder: The Two Big Rules of Corporate Behavior, Oversimplified

1. Limited Liability

Corporate shareholders, officers and employees have limited liability for the debts and bad acts of their corporations.

2. Profit for the Shareholders is The Only Legitimate Business

As protection for minority shareholders, one of the corporate rules that has evolved is that corporate managers and majority shareholders must, in essence, pursue only profitable activities. That is, a corporation simply may not do something because it would be nice to do it, or to benefit the majority over the minority.

This way, a majority shareholder couldn't control a company to, say, buy raw materials from another company also owned by the majority shareholder, and pay stupidly high prices for raw materials; or buy a house for the majority shareholder's uncle Larry -- all with the minority shareholder's money.

Now wait! you say, corporations give money to charity all the time! Yes they do: Giving to charity or doing a very public good turn is justified as good public relations, and as a one of many ways to increase corporate "good will" and thus sales and cash profits. Without that justification, good corporate deeds are essentially illegal.

The problem is, now some minority shareholders would rather sacrifice some company profit in order to make money without destroying the ecosystem.

Or if some shareholders think it would be good to earn enough to make a modest living themselves, while providing a good non-exploitative living for their employees too, a minority of greedy shareholders could sue to block such a plan. Bottom line: Unless a profit case can be made for that practice, it can't be imposed by the company.

The Practical Effect of Still Further Oversimplification

The over simplification of these two concepts in practice within corporate America leads to a pretty bleak place: Corporations exist to make profit only and every activity must exist to secure more profit. Although some "good" acts are done, they must have a positive impact on profits, making corporations seem cynical and crass.

Make a product that kills 200 people a year? Sure, if company losses due to those deaths out-value (in cash costs, not mere humanity) the profit to be made from the product.

But isn't that murder, to knowingly kill 200 people? Not necessarily. Remember Rule 2: Individual shareholders and managers are not responsible for corporate bad acts, for the most part. (This has started to change, actually, but please bear with the oversimplification. )

So: Making a product that kills 200 people is profitable, and killing people will not have personal consequences for the actors, and only minor financial consequences for the company -- so a dangerous product gets made.

Now it is not quite that simple in practice; there are many rules that restrict specific situations where, say 200 product units out of 200 killed people. And we have some health and safety regulations that must be met. But consider cigarettes: A legal product, used correctly, cigarettes kill more than a few folks, yet somehow no one goes to jail.

One More Oversimplification: An Accounting Principle

Money, goods, services have book value; a better world does not.

If destroying a forest to get the timber does not have direct economic costs to the company, then it does not need to be accounted for on the company books.

Now see oversimplifications 1 and 2, above: Non-responsibility and the profit requirement essentially demand that as many costs as can be shifted should be shifted off the books and on to the public.

Farming trees costs money and reduces shareholder profit; all the inputs get paid for in cash, on the books. Logging in old growth forests costs less; no ongoing tree-farming costs, and the government conveniently allows timber cutting leases at rates that usually assure that loggers make a profit -- again without accounting for the environmental, secondary effects of the choices. As a profit-required company, where spending shareholder equity on a personal moral choice can get you sued, which should you do? Go with the most profitable, of course.

Similarly, health care costs due to tobacco related diseases do not fall to the producers of tobacco, so they are not accounted for by the company. (This was, in part, the strategy of suing tobacco producers for user deaths -- convert the deaths into understandable language.)

On a less highly-charged front, the cost of disposing of wasteful or environmentally unsound products or packaging are likewise passed on to the society at large. The company doesn't have to find landfill space, or account for the environmental damage of using so many resources in one-use packaging.

What's A Green To Do? Change the Rules!

These three modern elements seem to me to account for a significant portion of all the corporate bad acts in the world. (The final factor is simple greed, but without these enabling rules greed would have less easy and ugly negative consequences.)

There are a number of proposals floating around to change the rules on just these points; and since most corporate rules are set by states, not the feds, it is entirely feasible to jigger a state's corporations code to create a new creature: The Ethical Corporation.

Delaware did it long ago: For decades it has been known as a state with rules friendly to corporate majorities, and thousands upon thousands of "Delaware Corporations" exist that have never been to Delaware other than as a mail drop at a service bureau or law firm.

One last caveat, though. The new ethical-corporation would have to be voluntary at first.

Ecorp: The "Fair Trade" of Corporate Structure

The howls over a sudden shift to a mandatory ethical corporate structure would be so shrill, so panicked -- so desperate -- that the idea would likely die aborning. And one can set aside any cynical ideas over the emptiness of corporate souls. All persons resist fundamental change to some degree, and if the change suggests that one has been morally bankrupt in a lifetime of business activity, the natural resistance to change will be even greater.

And so we might create an additional, purely voluntary, class of corporation, the e-corp or Ethical Corporation. There could even be two forms of e-corp, those allowed to be Ethical Corporations, all or some of the time, and those required to follow a transparent e-corp structure.

As people realized that they could buy products from certified ethical corporate actors, or invest in such companies, the market could easily begin to correct the unfortunate trend line of two centuries of corporate behavior.

Do I have the detailed proposal? No. Perhaps you have some ideas and can email or comment. Being part of a workable solution, even a first step solution like the Permissive Ethical Corporation, is far more helpful than breast beating and teeth gnashing over "corporate evil."

Saturday, February 25, 2006

Music to Be Green By

Before moving on to solve the world's problems with corporations, this musical break.

I found a pretty cool website some time ago called One Good Move that has clips of independent musicians (and a couple of biggies) that have recorded anti-war, anti-Bush and other inspirational songs. Every single genre is there, from a little vaudeville-esque ditty called "They Lied" (which compares Bush to Captain Kirk battling Klingons) to a pretty thrash piece called "Body Bags." There is serious folk, excellent parody, rap, ska, celtic rock, and more.

I put my favorites together on a cd, which I call War No More. I keep giving it to friends, who seem to like it. Here are the links for your own CD. You can play them one at a time here, or right click and choose "save target" to assemble them on your own PC and burn a CD.

The first song in the list, "Resist War," is a balm for anyone troubled by where we have gone on our military adventures in Iraq.

Note: Many of the links at One Good Move are broken. Nevertheless, most of the several hundred songs are still out there. Unfortunately, even when I have found a link, it can move around, so try googling the title if a link is broken. Many take a long time to load, even at DSL speeds.

Wednesday, February 15, 2006

A New Approach to Corporate Bashing

Yes indeed; sometimes we lose track of the really Green ideas. Sometimes I run into what I call an "of course" issue that strikes me as off course. Somewhere a Green idea became just another rant from the left.

Of Course, Off Course

What's an of "of course" issue? That's an issue where one assumes that any Green agrees with a certain approach to a problem. Pollution free sustainable energy as government policy? Of course! Improve the lives of rich and poor alike by offering universal health care? Of course! Be easy in our own consumption of resources? Of course! You get the idea.

One "of course" issue that has struck me more and more as wandering into wrongheaded territory is the nearly reflexive corporation bashing by many Greens and most progressives. This product is made by a large corporation? The product is tainted! Corporations must be bashed! Evil greedy corporations! Get rid of them all! Of course!

Whooops. Not so fast. Somehow this "of course" moment got shortcut-ed from the nuanced issue it should be into a generalized bash, inevitably beginning with the rant that "of course, all corporate entities are evil . . . ."

Green ≠Anti-Corporate

Corporations are not per se bad. They're just a collection of people doing business under a group name. People have been doing that for a very long time, and nothing about doing business mandates poor community citizenship or moral corruption.

But the legal structure surrounding corporations both requires and permits them to do what are essentially evil things without personal responsibility for the individuals doing the bad acts, and remove any need to look beyond beyond short-term profit, and foolishly selfish motives.

Market Forces Short Term Solution

Protest and education are aimed at creating market forces that will shoo corporate businesses into greener and more responsible practices in search of profit.

Various boycotts and the Fair Trade movement rely on this aspect of corporate behavior.

And yet there is an obvious disconnect and an element of futility in such an approach -- a truly sustainable business model cannot arise from a profit-only based corporate structure.

So, while it is probably effective to create market forces to drive companies to greener profit pastures for the short term, what is needed for long-term, systemic change is an overhaul of the corporate enabling rules.

Note well that it is not necessary to do away with the corporate structure altogether. Just change it to require accounting of hidden costs currently passed on to the community, to allow and even encourage socially responsible conduct, and create a mechanism for individual actor responsibility for bad acts.

That's a Green solution.


COMING UP:
The Ethical Corporation: A Sustainable Profit Model

Left, Right, and Green


Greens and non-Greens alike tend to call the party "left" or liberal. I wonder why?

Progressive I'll accept, but the real, true, clean Green is neither left nor right, neither Red State nor Blue -- do I have to say it? -- just Green.

Greens are progressive in looking for a change, regressive in looking to re-localize commerce, re-root democracy and invigorate communities; conservative in striving to consume less, save resources and the planet, but liberal in our breadth of interests and acceptance of differences; Greens are officially moderate in their tone of voice. (What other group has a "vibes watcher" as a formal office at meetings?).

Green is not the new pink, and neo-socialists looking for a home are in the wrong place; likewise Green is not enviro-fascism saving the pretty planet while ignoring the plight of the ordinary people who live here.

Green is something else; it is a blend of ALL of these things, and none of them. It's something new. Something Green.

Sometimes we lose track of that.

Wednesday, February 08, 2006

What have we here?

It's been a while since I registered as a Green, and longer still since I realized the Green Party platform best represented my vision of the best future for America and the world.

And while I do not agree with every Green Party member, nor would I vote for any candidate just because they run on a Green Party ballot line, to the degree that I want to put my support behind a set of political goals and values, the Green party best expresses it.

In that respect, the Ten Key Values are the core of what I understand the Green Party to be all about.

This blog is intended as a place for me to explore Green Party values and politics (along with issues of interest to this One SoCal Green in non-partisan political races) and engage in dialogue with folks interested in the topics at hand.

I do not promise to update at any regular interval, so if you are interested, be sure to subscribe (when the feed is up) so you don't have to click over and be disappointed if it has been silent here for a time.

This blog is a separate work from Easy Green, my little screed on green (small g) things that average folks of all parties, and not-particularly tree-huggerish bent, can do to improve their lives and ours. And it is not directly related to my participation in the Starbucks Challenge, which is segregated in its own blog, SBX, Fairtrade & Me. And finally, this space is separate from my personal Observations blog, which is mostly a personal diary of stuff in the backyard.
You won't want to read all four blogs; they are for different facets of my life and different audiences. But if you are interested in the thoughts of just One SoCal Green, you are welcome here.

I am, as the title indicates, in southern California, and specifically the City of Pasadena. In that respect, the oft-repeated saying that "all-politics is local" applies, and some issues will be just flat Pasadena-related, some regional, some national, some global. But all from this one local perspective. Stay tuned.