New Straits Times

BUSINESS WITH A PURPOSE

Millennial­s want to work for ethical companies, patronise brands that make them feel good and invest in socially responsibl­e companies, writes NICHOLAS KRISTOF

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WHEN I visit university campuses, I’m periodical­ly asked if students who seek jobs in the business world are immoral, money-grubbing sellouts.

I don’t think they are, for businesses can be a hugely important force for progress. Can be, but usually aren’t. Swirling in the air here in Davos at the World Econ o m i c For u m , a l o n g w i t h snowflakes, is an important discussion of how companies must do far more to benefit the 99 per cent, not just the one per cent. Enriching shareholde­rs is not enough.

We interrupt this column for a paragraph of cynicism. Tycoons always claim to cherish ordinary people’s best interests even as they rip them off. The United States tobacco executives have killed more people than Stalin managed to, and pharma executives recklessly peddling opioids may have killed as many peo- ple as Colombian drug lords, yet these business leaders sometimes seem to get moist-eyed describing the work they do. But the business toolbox is too important to give up on.

To me, the most interestin­g people in Davos aren’t the presidents or celebritie­s, but the social entreprene­urs — those using business tools to address social problems — and their work offers an inspiring window into what can be accomplish­ed.

Christophe­r Mikkelsen works with two dozen companies, including cellphone operators and Facebook, to help refugees find lost members of their families. His organisati­on, Refunite, once helped two Congolese sisters find each other after 16 years; they turned out to be living just a few miles apart in Nairobi.

Refunite is now helping more than one million refugees search for missing family members. It has already helped 40,000 of them connect, and Mikkelsen says this would never be possible if it were just an aid group rather than a hybrid piggybacki­ng on business networks.

Sasha Kramer works in Haiti to address two fundamenta­l problems: a lack of toilets and declining soil fertility.

Her organisati­on, SOIL, charges customers a few dollars a month to provide and service composting toilets that turn human waste into safe agricultur­al fertilizer.

The cost is one-third of what a sewage system would cost to op- erate. With water shortages around the world, there’s growing interest in that approach, so Haiti may become a model for other nations in the developing world.

In Kenya, Christie Peacock tackles a huge problem for farmers: Much of the feed, medicine and other agricultur­al supplies for sale are fake or substandar­d, including about 60 per cent of the fertiliser. When farmers buy fake seeds, their crops fail, and they go hungry.

Peacock previously worked in the aid world, but, she says, “I got disillusio­ned with the NGO model,” so her company, Sidai, is a forprofit venture founded with start-up capital from the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation. It now serves 200,000 Kenyan farmers.

That’s the advantage of a business approach: It is often more sustainabl­e and scalable than a charity. By working with African farmers to improve coffee production, Starbucks helps lift more people out of poverty than any number of aid efforts.

Among the giant corporatio­ns, there’s at least more of the right kind of talk. Laurence Fink, the chief executive of the investment firm BlackRock and one of the biggest investors in the world, shook the business world last week with an implicit threat to punish small-minded companies that “only deliver financial performanc­e” without “a positive contributi­on to society”.

What’s driving the rethink isn’t a tingling of the tycoon conscience, but brutal self-interest. Millennial­s want to work for ethical companies, patronise brands that make them feel good and invest in socially responsibl­e companies.

Some of this is shallow and some is deep, but it’s authentic: Doing good is no longer a matter of writing a few cheques at the end of the year, as it was for my generation; for many young people, it’s an ethos that governs where they work, shop and invest.

CEOs tell me that this forces their hand. If companies protect groping scumbags, that hurts recruitmen­t and they lose in the war for talent.

Increasing­ly, a company that ignores social value loses shareholde­r value.

I believe the best industries for doing good are law (pro bono work) and certain pharmaceut­icals ( d r u g d o n a t i o n p r ogrammes). That’s because they are held accountabl­e by metrics: Big law firms are ranked by American Lawyer for their pro bono work, and pharma donations are rated by the Access to Medicines Index.

When companies with hundreds of thousands of employees elevate women, fight for Dreamers, adopt environmen­t-friendly packaging, when they serve not only shareholde­rs but also the larger society, the impact can be transforma­tional.

But enough with the gauzy rhetoric. It’s time for businesses to walk the talk.

When companies with hundreds of thousands of employees elevate women, fight for Dreamers, adopt environmen­tfriendly packaging, when they serve not only shareholde­rs but also the larger society, the impact can be transforma­tional.

 ?? FILE PIC ?? Starbucks helps lift more people out of poverty than any number of aid efforts.
FILE PIC Starbucks helps lift more people out of poverty than any number of aid efforts.

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