Profit with Honor
The New Stage of Market Capitalism
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- €11.99
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- €11.99
Publisher Description
This wise and optimistic book examines the rampant scandals that plague American corporations today and shows how companies can reverse the resulting climate of mistrust. By seizing the opportunity to address some of the nation’s—and the world’s—most serious problems, business can strengthen its reputation for integrity and service and advance to a new stage of ethical legitimacy. Daniel Yankelovich, a social scientist and an experienced member of the corporate boardroom, describes the toxic convergence of cultural and business trends that has led inexorably to corporate scandals. Yet he offers reassurance that opportunity exists for positive change. Creative business leaders can advance market capitalism to its next stage of evolution, building upon business norms that simultaneously emphasize the legitimacy of profit making and the importance of the care that companies give to employees, customers, and the larger society.The book asserts that American culture has abandoned its old tradition of enlightened self-interest, of “doing well by doing good.” A narrow legalism has taken over (“I didn’t break the law; therefore I didn’t do anything wrong”). Yankelovich argues that attempts to deal with such flawed ethical norms by means of more laws and regulations cannot succeed. He offers a series of case histories to show how and why stewardship ethics can strengthen individuals, corporations, the nation, and the world economy.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Social scientist Yankelovich (Uniting America) is a policy-minded pollster who has served on the boards such companies as CBS, ETS and US West. Here he takes stock of Enron, WorldCom, Tyco, Adelphia and other alleged bilkers, arguing that such companies are not just bad apples on a sound branch: the increasing permissiveness and deregulation of the business world, he argues, coupled with the stock market's increased emphasis on short-term shareholder value, has instigated a climate of unenlightened, all-consuming self-interest. Americans are thus faced with a stark choice between a free market or a civil society, but each vision is "radically incomplete." Arguing that the current climate for business is both harmful and unlikely to be legislated away, he proposes a new set of cultural norms dubbed "stewardship ethics"-social responsibility, but without the usual self-righteous disdain for money associated with non-profits. Yaneklovich's guidelines evoke the usual business utopia, where employees and consumers alike return to trust in the corporations, but his slim volume is more visionary than practical, leaving interested parties largely on their own when it comes to implementing his ideas on stewardship.