Daily Mail

Don’t worship false profits

- Ruth Sunderland BUSINESS EDITOR

LiKE shoulder pads and Duran Duran, Milton Friedman was big in the Eighties. The American economist was a huge influence on the thinking of Margaret Thatcher and Ronald Reagan.

Even Gordon Gekko’s ‘ Greed is Good’ mantra is a simplistic interpreta­tion of his theory. Friedman’s line was that the primary – and pretty much only – duty of a businessma­n is to his shareholde­rs (he didn’t conceive of female chief executives back in 1970).

His famous essay ‘The Social Responsibi­lity of Business is to increase its Profits’ is 50 years old this autumn. in his view, any boss who swerved from the single-minded pursuit of profit to spend time on, say, protecting the environmen­t was wrong-headed and an unwitting puppet of socialism.

He believed that when bosses use company money on worthy activities – what we now call Environmen­tal and Social Governance

– it amounts to a despotic form of taxation imposed on shareholde­rs.

There was an important proviso in the essay, which was that businesses should pursue profit through open competitio­n, without deception or fraud. He didn’t consider that if profit is worshipped and other considerat­ions are sidelined, it is easier to cross the line into unacceptab­le behaviour.

To 21st century eyes, his language sounds extreme. But his ideas have still left a mark on corporate thinking. There are plenty of bosses who believe social responsibi­lity and good governance is box-ticking or at best a fluffy feel-good exercise.

Look at the contempt for governance at The Hut, which is floating on the London market, or the blind eyes turned to sweatshops at former market darling Boohoo.

The trouble with shareholde­r primacy is that investors tend to tolerate bad behaviour so long as it seems lucrative. FRiEDMAN’S

philosophy was shaken to its core by the financial crisis and the pandemic may be the death knell. Post 2008, the banks, having taken billions of rescue cash, could no longer shrug off their obligation­s to society.

The financial meltdown also exposed another flaw in the idea of shareholde­r supremacy. Banks and other big businesses were revealed as ‘ownerless corporatio­ns’ with no- one capable of keeping greedy incompeten­ts like Fred Goodwin in check. in the pandemic, businesses have been helped by the taxpayer to hundreds of billions of pounds. What then, do they owe us in return? Clearly, a Friedman-ite response is unacceptab­le. But answers are not easy.

Take the question of dividends. Should Tesco have paid a dividend to its investors when it has taken taxpayer money through business rates relief? Many critics last week thought otherwise. And how far do responsibi­lities stretch? is it reasonable, for instance, for a business whose staff are largely working from home to pull out of a city centre and save on property costs if other firms suffer as a consequenc­e?

Even before the pandemic the rise of Big Tech had begun to raise thorny new problems about corporate responsibi­lities. Facebook’s attempts to wriggle out of having to deal with fake and harmful material peddled on its platform spring to mind.

Many businesses have responded brilliantl­y to the pandemic, proving they are not soulless profit machines but part of the communitie­s they serve. Fifty years on, it’s time to leave Friedman behind.

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