Mentions Business Roundtable

in The American Prospect  

On August 19, 2019, the Business Roundtable issued a press release containing a roughly 300-word statement, signed by 181 of its members. ā€œBusiness Roundtable Redefines the Purpose of a Corporation to Promote ā€˜An Economy That Serves All Americans,ā€™ā€ its headline read, citing a quote from its chair, Jamie Dimon. The CEOs pledged to ā€œlead their companies for the benefit of all stakeholdersā€”customers, employees, suppliers, communities and shareholders,ā€ and ā€œmove away from shareholder primacy.ā€ The CEOs added, ā€œEach of our stakeholders is essential. We commit to deliver value to all of them, for the future success of our companies, our communities and our country.ā€

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A new narrative quickly began to solidify: Milton Friedmanā€™s profits-at-all-costs way of thinking was dead. In fact, Fortune wrote in its cover story that ā€œFriedman must be turning in his grave.ā€

There was just one catch: CEOs werenā€™t actually promising a new way of doing business, but simply a new way of talking about doing business.

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As Columbia Business Schoolā€™s Shiva Rajgopal, co-author of one study that investigated whether Business Roundtable CEOs followed through on their pledges, observed, ā€œWhen these guys signed the BRT statement, the stock prices of these firms [did not] move ā€¦ There was no heartbeat at all.ā€ This suggests, as Rajgopal and his co-author wrote, ā€œmarket participants agree with the assessment that the BRT statement represents cheap talk.ā€

via Cory Doctorow