Chapter 7 Corporate Social Responsibility and Corruption in A Global Context
Chapter 7 Corporate Social Responsibility and Corruption in A Global Context
Chapter 7 Corporate Social Responsibility and Corruption in A Global Context
GLOBAL CONTEXT
Lesson Objectives
At the end of this lesson, the students should be able to:
1. Explain the meaning of corporate social responsibility;
2. Identify the potential roles of governments in the CSR Agenda;
3. Explain the human labor rights; and
4. Identify hiding the loot.
National CSR agendas in the middle and low income countries have been
less visible internationally, and often not been labelled CSR.
The result has been CSR practices that are largely framed in rich countries,
then internationalized and transferred to other businesses and social
settings.
Governments of some middle-income countries facing major social
challenges have explicitly sought to engage business in meeting those
challenges.
There are two broad sets of justifications for public sector actors in middle
and low-income countries to engage with CSR: defensive and proactive.
Defensive Justification
Relates to minimizing the potential
adverse effects of CSR on local communities,
environments and markets when it is imposed
through international supply chains and
investment.
Proactive Justification
Public sector engagement with CSR potentially spans social, economic and
environmental sphere.
Regulation
Facilitation
Partnership
Endorsement
Demonstration
To promote goals related to CSR is wide and reflects varying policy approaches
as well as economic circumstances.
Corporations, particularly the larger ones have significant influence not only on the
economy but also on the social and political life of the country in which they
operate.
In affirmation to this, the entrepreneurial strategy of these large enterprises should
be based on the following CSR demands.
Be Compliant
The operational conduct of the enterprise should not be lower than
the standards of the host country.
Be Consistent
Transfer of technology
The grant of licenses for the use of intellectual property
right at costs compatible with the local market;
Granting authority to manufacture products and brands
that are protected under international IP laws;
Training for the development of local skills;
Development of new products by means of local
knowledge and skills;
Creation of viably durable forms of collaboration with local
partners; this will encourage them to gain access to the
global market.
Corporate venturing investment in the local start-up capital.
A good number of international companies have visible initiatives that can be called
CSR action.
These kinds of activities would give a good feedback from the community.
TRANSPARENCY
LEGALITY
The adherence to the applicable set of laws in force is the minimum requirement.
It is clear that a socially responsible enterprise rejects conducts and practices such
as unfair competition, corruption and tax evasion that put at risk the growth and
development of the societies.
CONSUMERS
The consumers’ demands not only concern health and eco sustainability of the
goods and of all the productive phases but also the attestation that they are not
produced by means of exploitations of human resources.
SUPPLY CHAINS
Due to market globalization, supply chains have become very complex.
GLOBALIZATION OF CORRUPTION
Corruption takes many different forms, from the routine cases of bribery or petty
abuse of power that are said to “grease the wheels” to the amassing of spectacular
personal wealth through embezzlement or other dishonest means.
For MNCs, bribery enables companies to gain contrast or concessions which they
would not otherwise have won.
Such bribery may be pervasive, but it is difficult to detect.
Many countries including France, Germany and the UK treated bribes as legitimate
business expenses which could be claimed for as tax deductions.
EXPORTING CORRUPTION
The corrupt practices of multinational
corporations affect other countries in
many ways.
They distort decision-making in favor of projects that benefit the few rather than
the many.
Increasing Debit
Bribes increase the prices of projects. When this projects are paid for with
money borrowed internationally, bribery adds to a country’s external debt.
Ordinary people end up paying this back through cuts in spending on health,
education and public services. Often they also have to pay by shouldering
the long term burdens of projects that do not benefit them and which they
never requested.
Bribing high level officials ensures profits and helps off load risk. In many
power project in Asia, for example, there has been, according to the World
Bank, both “ a high level of corruption” and a tendency to overestimate
demand for electricity.
Private banking services and offshore financial centers are the major
conduits and repositories for bribes and corrupt gains. An estimated US$40
billion from poor and former communist economies find its way into US or
European banks every year, much of it illegitimately gained.
Private Banking
Because of the debt crisis in the late 1980s onwards, western banks had
fewer opportunities to lend to Third World countries and thus started to
pursue wealthy individuals in the Third world to encourage them to place
their wealth in the private bank accounts.
Off shore banks and companies are another part of the system through
which money is siphoned out of poor countries and hidden well away from
its citizens. Offshore financial center became prominent in the1960s with
bank deposits in tax havens increasing from $11 billion in 1968 to $385
billion in 1978.
Since in the 1980s, offshore finance centers for tax havens have been a
magnet for money from third world countries, both clean and dirty.
When dirty money disappears offshore, it becomes more difficult for
governments to tackle corruptions
International pressure has been mounting in recent years to return money which
has been stolen from public treasuries and stashed away in western banks and
offshore tax havens.
In 1998, US$500 million of former Philippine President Ferdinand Marcos money
was returned from Swiss banks of the Philippines.
More sweeping attempts to recover stolen money will require both promulgating
an international convention and closing loopholes that allow ill gotten gains to leave
countries in the first place.
Closing down offshore centers is vital to stopping the laundering of corrupt money
and the draining of resources from the third world.
BLACKLISTING COMPANIES
GOVERNMENT ACTIONS
All governments need to clean up their act but they need to do so in an environment
in which donors are not imposing inappropriate, over hasty policy changes.
Any successful anti-corruption program has to build up at a national level, be
appropriate to local and national contexts, and have full support from government
employees at all levels.
Imposing anti-corruption strategies by putting up conditions on loans will not work
and may be even led to governments implementing cosmetics changes which at
the best, do little and, at worse, undermine the anti-corruption efforts.
DETERRENTS
For further discussion please refer to the link provided: Business be Ethically Sensitive
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=X1cD_9sM2Q8
For further discussion please refer to the link provided Business’ Role in Overcoming the Poverty Trap
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oDPeKhOLkKI
For further discussion please refer to the link provided Whistle Blowing
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1SVIpDMk7fk