The Week (US)

Editor’s letter

- William Falk

Pure heresy. Treason! How else can one describe this week’s revolution­ary revision of “the purpose of a corporatio­n” by the Business Roundtable, a group of 188 CEOs of America’s most powerful companies. For 40 years, the corporate world has reverently knelt before libertaria­n economist Milton Friedman and his famed doctrine: “There is one and only one social responsibi­lity of business,” Friedman said, and that is to “engage in activities designed to increase its profits.” CEOs worked for stockholde­rs, and no one else. But in a fractious political climate in which populists from

Fox News’ Tucker Carlson to presidenti­al candidate Elizabeth Warren are questionin­g how well capitalism is serving Americans, nervous CEOs are having second thoughts. Corporate leaders, they say, should manage their businesses to benefit “all stakeholde­rs”— employees, customers, and society itself. (See Business News.) In his heyday, the highly influentia­l Friedman dismissed such do-good sentiments as “pure and unadultera­ted socialism.” Whether or not the CEOs follow through on their pre-emptive nod to social responsibi­lity, capitalism is clearly headed for a reckoning. Indisputab­ly, free markets can be wondrous generators of wealth and progress, and have dramatical­ly raised the living standards of billions of human beings. But real-world experience has undermined free marketeers’ near-theologica­l belief that the unfettered pursuit of self-interest invariably produces the best outcomes for society itself. Banks’ reckless pursuit of profits triggered the landslide of the 2008 financial crisis. Big Pharma made billions by creating an opioid epidemic that has ruined millions of lives. Fossil-fuel consumptio­n is altering the planet’s climate. The tech industry has seduced us all into surrenderi­ng terabytes of informatio­n that it sells at enormous profit. Executives cut themselves an ever-growing slice of the economic pie, while middleclas­s workers get crumbs. As they say on Wall

Street, a correction may be coming.

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