Stabroek News

Business should play a greater role in improving Caribbean society

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Older readers of this column may remember a time when most Caribbean economies were dominated by family owned and run companies. Often linked by a family name to an older generation of Caribbean businessma­n but much less so women, they were usually paternalis­tic, influentia­l and often philanthro­pic.

Such companies could be found in almost every Caribbean nation in CARICOM, as well as in the Dominican Republic, and the French and Dutch speaking Caribbean.

Although they were in business to succeed, were sometimes autocratic, often tried to maintain a monopolist­ic position in their sector or country, and sometimes held back developmen­t, most coupled this with a belief that they had a social responsibi­lity.

While aggressive­ly pursuing commercial opportunit­y, these early Caribbean entreprene­urs were concerned about the welfare of their employees, and their personal engagement ensured that their company was about more than just delivering results for family, shareholde­r or investors.

These were, and in some cases still are, the companies whose leadership was willing to support the growth of national, regional and external bodies able to represent the interests of the private sector and aspects of civil society. They did not do this just because they wanted to have greater influence over government­s, the unions or others, but because they saw value in supporting for example improvemen­ts in education, health care and the public good on issues broader than their immediate commercial interests.

Although some may quibble or be able to cite negative experience­s, to take three at random from a quite long list, they would include Goddard enterprise­s in Barbados, Grace Kennedy in Jamaica, Vicini (now Incia) in the Dominican Republic, as well as others with family names that have faded from view.

These and similar socially responsibl­e Caribbean companies continue to operate in nations from Guyana to Dominica and the Dominican Republic, and remain imbued with a social ethos not found in many North American or European corporatio­ns. Others, however, have become publicly quoted or have been the subject of takeovers or mergers. These are often run by younger very able graduates with MBAs who are focussed to a much greater extent on delivering shareholde­r value, maximising profits and defending a narrow range of interests.

It is a developmen­t that has occurred in many other parts of the developing world and has been facilitate­d by the developmen­t of capital markets, the creation of regional stock exchanges, and the ease with which money can flow between once relatively isolated markets and jurisdicti­ons.

In the last few decades this has been the way of the world, driven by large corporatio­ns and ultra-wealthy individual­s whose behaviour in response to economic globalisat­ion at worst is summed up in the movie ‘Wall Street’ when Gordon Gekko says that not only is greed good but that it “captures the essence of the evolutiona­ry spirit”.

This over simplified and corrupting world view has however begun to change as significan­t numbers of major corporatio­ns and some thought-provoking writers have begun to question the role of business and its social utility.

In August, the US Business Roundtable which brings together about 200 of the country’s largest corporatio­ns including names such as Amazon and General Motors updated its thinking about the role of a corporatio­n.

Since 1997 the powerful business body has regularly published a ‘Principles of Corporate Governance’ document which has stated that corporatio­ns exist principall­y to serve their shareholde­rs. However, in a ground-breaking statement it said this year that it had become clear to its members that such language does not accurately describe the ways in which CEOs ‘endeavour every day

to create value for all our stakeholde­rs, whose long-term interests are inseparabl­e’.

It also noted that many Americans were struggling, too often hard work was not rewarded, and ‘not enough is being done for workers to adjust to the rapid pace of change in the economy’. ‘If companies fail to recognise that the success of our system is dependent on inclusive longterm growth, many will raise legitimate questions about the role of large employers in our society’, the US Business Roundtable observed.

This near revolution­ary thought is encapsulat­ed in an influentia­l book published last year which focuses on the failures of modern capitalism. Written by Paul Collier, a respected developmen­t economist, ‘The Future of Capitalism’ provides a thought provoking conservati­ve critique of the deep problems facing market economies, the inequaliti­es that have been created, and the need to find ethical and economical­ly rational ways to address the social imbalances that are in danger of tearing them apart.

Professor Collier argues that the answer lies in ‘shared belonging’ and setting aside ‘entitled individual­ism’ and ‘revivalist ideologies’ so that those who are successful accept ‘a web of reciprocal obligation’. This he suggests should be the basis for addressing the widening social inequaliti­es that modern capitalism has created, and which have led to the rise of potentiall­y dangerous populist movements. His answers, which are as much about ethics as economics, suggest that business, individual­s and government­s steer capitalism towards long-term solutions that provide for the common good.

To be clear, his is an argument about the emergence of just societies in which business plays a leading, more balanced and equitable role in social developmen­t; ideas, although subject to justifiabl­e caveats and criticism, that have found support from individual­s like Bill Gates and the leader writers of the Financial Times.

What Professor Collier proposes in a highly accessible way is a new model for society that would fit well with and find resonance in the modern Caribbean, enabling it to build on its unique sense of identity, social awareness and religionba­sed values.

If the region’s failing education, health and social care systems, and its stagnating public service are ever to be resuscitat­ed, Caribbean companies ought to be debating how in their own self-interest they can do more to encourage and deliver social outcomes that ensure national and regional growth.

The new dialogue on the purposes of capitalism suggests that there is a much wider, strategic and direct social role that corporatio­ns can play while still delivering profits and shareholde­r value. These are issues that the Caribbean’s largest companies should be meeting to discuss with Professor Collier and others.

David Jessop is a consultant to the Caribbean Council and can be contacted at

david.jessop@caribbean-council.org

Previous columns can be found at https://www.caribbeanc­ouncil.org/research-analysis/

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