Title: Corporate Behavior
1Corporate Behavior Structural Adjustment
- Marian Smith
- Emily Buckwalter
- Julia Lin
- Marcela Fuentes
- Mike Gallagher
2The Rules of Corporate Behavior By Jerry Mander
- Authors Overall Argument
- P1 If the structure and primary ability of an
entity is to increase profit, then it is not
concerned with people and the environment - P2 Corporations are entities with the structure
and primary ability to increase profit - C Corporations are not concerned with people
and the environment
3Argument 1 - Preface
- 100 out of 450,000 corporations in the US pay for
75 of commercials - Public television has lost federal support
- Corporations now fund 50 of commercial-free
public television
4Corporate Consciousness The Effect of Modern
Media
- P1 Media has great influence over US consumers
values, priorities, and lifestyles - P2 Corporations heavily control media
- C Corporations have great influence over US
consumers values, priorities, and lifestyles
5Dissecting Premise 1
- P1 If something influences us to be satisfied
when purchasing commodities, then it affects our
personal values, priorities, and lifestyles - P2 Media and the use of commercials influences
us to be satisfied when purchasing commodities - C - Media affects our values, priorities, and
lifestyles
6Argument 2 - Preface
- Corporations provide books, videos, and computer
programs for free as a public service - Example Oil Chemical companies providing
educational material - Demonstrates nature as valuable resource
- Educates youth how to manage nature through
pesticides, chemicals and large scale agribusiness
7Corporate Consciousness Educational Factor
- P1 Primary Education greatly influences our
children's values, priorities, and conceptions of
how life should be lived - P2 By donating educational material,
corporations control the structure of Primary
Education - C Corporations greatly influence our children's
values, priorities, and conceptions of how life
should be lived
8Dissecting Premise 1
- How does Primary Education greatly influence our
children's values, priorities, and conceptions of
how life should be lived? - First structured educational system
- What is learned as youth greatly affects a person
- Does it teach values? Or does the family teach
values? Religion?
9Corporate Shame Obligations to Community Welfare
- P1 Management must act primarily in economic
interests of shareholders, which is to make a
profit - P2 Ignoring community welfare issues avoids
seriously damaging lawsuit costs, and therefore
leads to higher profits - C To achieve higher profits, it is necessary
for management to ignore community welfare issues
10Dissecting Premise 2
- Does ignoring community welfare increases
profits? - By acting in the interest of community welfare,
management would be ignoring profitable ventures - If profitable ventures are ignored, shareholders
would file costly lawsuits that management was
not acting primarily in their economic interests - Must management completely ignore community
welfare? - What if acting in the interest of the community
if it is also a profitable venture?
11Argument Preface
- Human Rights
- Law calls corporations fictitious humans
- Gives right to buy/sell property or sue in court
for injuries or slander - Corporate Speech (i.e. advertising, PR, etc.)
protected under the First Amendment
- Human Responsibilities
- In cases of negligence (causing death or injury)
corporation cannot be jailed or executed - May be fined, but structure does not change
- Corporations do not die a natural death
- No feelings of shame or remorse
12Corporate Schizophrenia Corporate Life
- P1 If something has the same rights as humans,
but does not have to abide by human
responsibilities, they are above the law - P2 Corporations have the same rights as humans,
but do not have to abide by human
responsibilities - C Corporations are above the law
13The Inherent Rules of Corporate Behavior
- P1 If a persons morality is constrained by
growth profit, they are constrained from
exercising personal morality where this conflicts
with profit - P2 Corporate morality is constrained by growth
profit - C People in a corporation are constrained from
exercising personal morality where this conflicts
with profit
14The Inherent Rules of Corporate Behavior The
Growth Imperative
- P1 Desire for harvest of scarce resources
forces US culture and standards of living on
resource-rich regions - P2 Corporations desire harvest scarce
resources - C Corporations force US culture and standards
of living on resource-rich regions
15The Inherent Rules of Corporate Behavior
Opposition to Nature
- P1 All corporate manufacturing activity depends
upon intervention in reorganization of nature - P2 All intervention reorganization of nature
is destructive to nature - C All corporate manufacturing is destructive to
nature
16The Inherent Rules of Corporate Behavior
Homogenization
- P1 By creating more commodities for profit,
there is a homogenizing pressure on society - P2 Corporations create more commodities for
profit - C Corporations exert a homogenizing pressure on
society
17Dissecting Premise 1
- Why does creating more commodities put
homogenizing pressure on society? - Homogenized Society everyone is the same owns
the same material goods ex. Nuclear family - Choice encourages accumulation of commodities
- Celebrates material values
- Corporations do not like sharing communities or
nonmaterial lifestyles - Represent threat to homogenization of worldwide
markets and culture
18Remaining Arguments
- Competition Aggression
- Amorality
- Hierarchy
- Quantification, Linearity, Segmentation
- Dehumanization
- Exploitation
- Ephemerality Mobility
19The Rules of Corporate BehaviorReview
- Corporations are setting up an ideal world for
their expansion - Managers must set personal morals aside for the
good of the company - Corporations have the rights of humans, but not
the responsibilities - Basic rule of corporate operations is profit
growth first - Corporations are willing to exploit weaker
countries for their own profit
20Structural Adjustment Programs Success for
Whom? By Walden Bello
- Structural adjustment programs may not be the
optimal solution to debt of developing countries - Negative effects on the economy resulting from
structural adjustment programs
21What are structural adjustment programs (SAPs)?
- What are structural adjustment loans (SALs)?
- Loans provided to debtor countries
- Immediate objective To rescue northern banks
that had become overextended in the Third World. - Long-term objective To further integrate
southern countries into the global economy.
22How are these objectives accomplished?
- The World Bank and the International Monetary
Fund (IMF) make loans to Third World countries
with massive debt. - Interest payments are then transferred to private
Northern banks. - But, to receive these SALs, the governments of
the borrowing country must comply with specific
economic policies
23Conditions of the SALs
- Remove restrictions on foreign investments
- Reorient the economy to favor exports
- Reduce wages or wage increases, reducing
government spending. - Cutting restrictions on imports (tariffs, quotas,
etc.) - Devaluing the local currency against other hard
currencies - Privatizing state enterprises
- Undertake a deregulation program to free the
export industries from government controls
24What is the Third World Debt Crisis?
- Began in the 70s when wealthy oil-exporting
countries put their money in Western banks - Banks loaned the money to developing countries
- Factors such as increasing interest rates, global
recession, and low commodity prices caused debts
to increase rapidly - Debtors quickly fell behind in payments
251982 Third World Debt Crisis
- P1- During the Third World Debt Crisis, many
debtor countries needed SALs to pay off their
debts - P2- Receiving SALs required a country to undergo
an SAP - C- Many debtor countries underwent SAPs during
the Third World Crisis
26Study by Eva Jespersen
- Sampled 24 countries
- Evaluated by
- rate of capital accumulation
- Capital accumulation Increases in a country's
capital stock when gross investment is greater
than depreciation - share of manufacturing in GDP
- growth of exports
- Exports commodities sold to a foreign country
27Results
- Capital accumulation slowed in 20 countries
- Share of manufacturing in GDP stagnated in 18
countries - Exports fell in 13 countries
- Increases experienced in 11 countries did not
compensate for the increase in imports
28Explaining Stagnation
- Misdiagnosis of the problem
- World Bank and IMF believed the barrier to growth
was insufficient integration in the global
economy - The barrier to growth in the pre-SAL period was
due to - Price increases in OPEC oil (1970s)
- Debt crisis in the early 1980s
29Explaining Stagnation
- Consequences of the measures taken by the World
Bank and the IMF - Reduction in government spending and wage cuts
led to an economic contraction and increased
unemployment. - Reduction of price controls on imports increased
the local cost of raw materials and components
used in local assembly plants. - Rising exports of small range crops (sugar, palm
oil, and bananas) led to a decline in prices and
therefore a decline in earnings. - Much of the earnings are in any case used for
servicing debt rather than for productive
domestic investment. (Bello 288)
30Chile An Economic Laboratory
- 600 state enterprises sold off
- Went from being one of most protected to one of
least protected Latin American economies - Foreign investors achieved a strong presence in
the economy - Deregulation of domestic financial market had
been accomplished - Economy had become more integrated into the
international economy
31If success is measured by
- The effects on Chiles external accountsthen SAP
was a failure as Chiles external debt rose to
19 billion in 1991 - Sustained growththen SAP was a failure as
Chiles GDP growth averaged - 2.6 percent per year (1974-1989) and
- 4.0 percent per year (1950-1961) as opposed to
- 4.6 percent per year (1961-1971) before SAP was
applied - Free market policieswhich plunged Chiles into
two major depressions in one decade
32Reasons for failure of the Chilean economy
- Manufacturing sector lost ground (26 to 20 of
GDP in 1960s) - Export-oriented enterprises grew which led to
environmental problems - Chilean economys dependence on exports and a
shrinking manufacturing base - Social impact of the radical free market policy
33Chile is not alone
- Average income in the North was about 18 times as
much as the average in the South. - Latin America, SAPs largely canceling out the
progress of the 1960s and 1970s (Iglesias 1992).
- Hunger and malnutrition gave rise to tuberculosis
and cholera - 1991 1300 in Peru died from cholera
- Sub-Saharan Africa Total debt in 1994 was 110
of GNP, compared to 35 for most developing
countries
34Outward objectives
- Structural adjustment has been a huge failure if
the measure of success has to do with resolving
the debt problems in the Third World economies
and bringing about sustained economic growth
35Underlying criteria
- Structural adjustment has been a huge success if
the measure of success is that debtor nations
have become able to pay the interest payments on
their debt. and, most important of all, they
have become more tightly integrated into the
capitalist world market and thereby made
increasingly dependent for their sustenance on
the northern powers and the transnational
corporations that effectively control them.
(Bello 293)
36Objectives of the SAPs
- P1- The objective of the SAP was to bring about
sustained economic growth - P2- Statistics have shown that countries with the
SAP have not experiencedeconomic growth - C- Therefore, the SAP did not accomplish its
objective
37 38Resources
- http//www2.gol.com/users/bobkeim/money/debt.html
- www.j-bradford-delong.net/macro_online/display_glo
ssary.html - http//www.hyperdictionary.com/dictionary/Export