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Corporate Social Responsibility

Chapter. 3. Corporate Social Responsibility. The Meaning of Corporate Social Responsibility How Corporate Social Responsibility Began The Corporate Social Responsibility Debate Balancing Economic, Legal, and Social Responsibilities. Exhibit 3.A. Websites emphasizing corporate social

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Corporate Social Responsibility

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  1. Chapter 3 Corporate Social Responsibility The Meaning of Corporate Social Responsibility How Corporate Social Responsibility Began The Corporate Social Responsibility Debate Balancing Economic, Legal, and Social Responsibilities

  2. Exhibit 3.A Websites emphasizing corporate social responsibility for various stakeholders • Responsible Shopper (www.responsibleshopper.org) • Social Funds (www.socialfunds.com) • CorpWatch (www.corpwatch.org) • Business and Social Initiatives Database • (oracle02.ilo.org/vpi/welcome) • Capital Partnership Group (cog.kent.edu) • The Green Business Letter (www.GreenBiz.com)

  3. Corporate Social Responsibility • A corporation should be held accountable for any of its actions that affect people, their communities, and their environment. • Requires companies to balance the benefits to be gained against the costs of achieving those benefits. • Iron Law of Responsibility: In the long run, those who do not use power in ways society considers responsible will lose it.

  4. Figure 3.1 Foundation principles of corporate social responsibility

  5. Figure 3.2 The pros and cons of corporate social responsibility .

  6. Figure 3.3 The multiple responsibilities of business

  7. Exhibit 3.B Two views of corporate social responsibility • The shareholder view • The only social responsibility of business is to create shareholder wealth legally and with integrity. • Corporate management cannot decide what is in the social interest. • The costs of social responsibility which do not increase the value of stock, will be passed on to consumers by way of higher prices, or to employees as lower wages, or to shareholders as lower returns. • The multiple stakeholders view • All customers and employees are treated with dignity. • Investor trust must be honored. • Relationships with suppliers must be based on mutual respect. • Belief in fair economic competition. • Business can contribute to social reform and honor human rights.

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