Employees as Benefactors of Corporate Philanthropy
Corporate Social Responsibility
The Case for Employees as Benefactors of Corporate Philanthropy
The Case for Employees as Benefactors of Corporate Philanthropy
A United Auto Workers unionization vote recently made the news, in part because the vote was taking place in the Southeastern United States where conservative state legislators have historically treated organized labor with hostility, but what seemed to be most newsworthy about this event was that the corporation, Volkswagen, decided to take a neutral position (Paresh, 2014). The vote took place last week and workers at the Chattanooga, Tennessee plant decided to reject union membership by a narrow margin. The national news media also took note when several conservative Tennessee politicians remained true to their anti-union ideology by threatening to end subsidies for Volkswagen and to push production of a new vehicle to Mexico. Experts in labor law believed these threats were coercive enough to have influenced the vote and the UAW agreed. Just days after the vote, UAW leaders filed a complaint with the National Labor Relations Board (NLRB) in an effort to get the vote set aside.
The neutral position taken by Volkswagen, especially after being threatened by Tennessee politicians, stands out because Americans assume corporations will take a confrontational position when faced with union contract negotiations or labor organizing activity. The shareholder-stakeholder divide is so ingrained in the American psyche that Volkswagen's neutral stance came as a bit of a shock. This essay will examine why Volkswagen made this choice and whether employees truly enjoys stakeholder status within U.S. corporate social responsibility (CSR) paradigms.
Organization-Stakeholder Relations
The primary stakeholders for any commercial enterprise, aside from the entrepreneur(s), are the creditors, employees, local community, and environment (Ho, 2010). Within a capitalist society, friction between business owners and stakeholders has always existed and the balance of power has almost always favored large corporations. The main remedies for this imbalance of power have been organized labor on behalf of employees and government agencies and non-profits on behalf of the environment. Within the United States at least, a kind of 'cold war' seems to exist between these factions and open hostility occasionally bursts into public consciousness when something out of the ordinary occurs.
The need for collective bargaining or the threat of unionization will probably never be rendered obsolete in a capitalist system. This sentiment was captured by a quote cited by Marens (2008) as the opening salvo in his thesis on early CSR scholars. The cited quote is: "I have come to the view, however, that corporate power is so potent and so pervasive that voluntary social responsibility cannot be relied on as a significant form of control of business" (p. 55). Ho (2010) admits to a similar limitation when considering the influence that activist shareholders and institutional investors have on corporate relations with stakeholders, but rather than take a skeptical perspective she offers a more optimistic view of future trends, one that suggests shareholders and institutional investors are gradually emphasizing the influence of stakeholder interests on the bottom line. In other words, profits remain the core mission of any commercial enterprise, but taking into consideration the interests of stakeholders is increasingly viewed as simply good business practice.
Profitability is also the primary concern of small business owners (SBOs); however, SBOs tend to be more sensitive to the needs of stakeholders (Fassin, Van Rossem, & Buelens, 2010). When Fassin and colleagues (2010) interviewed SBOs about the concepts of CSR, including business ethics, sustainability, and profit, many remarked that ethics is something personal, even private, but CSR and sustainability is intimately linked to a business' public persona. These concepts were not viewed by SBOs as mutually exclusive, but overlapping and complementary. Philanthropy was also viewed by some SBOs as a private affair and should never be used as a centerpiece for marketing campaigns, which at least one interviewee remarked is often the case with major corporations.
The sentiment that philanthropy should not be used as part of a marketing campaign or corporate image was reiterated by Barnett (2007), with the inclusion of several quotes in his article on stakeholder influence. Some of the cited examples included Philip Morris donating water to flood victims and McDonalds adding salads to their menu. These examples were contrasted with the philanthropic activities of a few major corporations that have made a long-term commitment to the local communities they serve. The SBOs interviewed by Fassin and colleagues (2010) commented on this difference as an...
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