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Business Ethics and Social Responsibility
Social Responsibility
Business Textbooks Boundless Business Business Ethics and Social Responsibility Social Responsibility
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Concept Version 8
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Early Efforts in Social Responsibility

Social responsibility is the idea that an entity needs to act in a way that balances its own gain with societal benefits.

Learning Objective

  • Recognize Andrew Carnegie's business principles of charity and stewardship as the precursors to modern organizational social responsibility


Key Points

    • Social responsibility as an ethical principle was first drawn from the business philosophy of Andrew Carnegie, the 19th century steel magnate who believed in charity and social stewardship.
    • Economist Milton Friedman held that humans act in self-interest, to maximize profit, and social issues were the government's issue.
    • After recent significant corporate scandals and disasters, the relationship between society and corporations has been severely tested.

Terms

  • social audit

    reporting on the societal and environmental effects of organizations' economic actions to particular interest groups

  • charity

    An organization, the objective of which is to carry out a charitable purpose.

  • social responsibility

    A voluntarily assumed obligation toward the good of society at large as opposed to the self alone.


Example

    • Carnegie's philanthropic accomplishments included contributions to education by establishing many public libraries around the country.

Full Text

Social responsibility is the idea that an entity needs to act in a way that balances its own gain with societal benefits. Entities include individuals as well as businesses. Companies do need to make a profit, but not at the expense of society or the environment. Businesses should use ethical decision-making practices to make responsible decisions and reduce the need for government involvement such as, for example, Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), which monitors business decisions and practices to prevent pollution.

The notion of social responsibility is far from new. Its roots are in economics and the writings of Andrew Carnegie (1835-1919), a Scottish-born businessman and founder of U.S. Steel. Carnegie's business philosophy was based on two principles: charity (the more fortunate should assist those who are less fortunate) and stewardship (the rich hold their money "in trust" for the rest of society, using it for any purpose society deems appropriate).

Milton Friedman (1912-2006), an American economist and Nobel Laureate, later advocated that corporations exist only to maximize profit and behave in their own best self-interest. He argued that corporations' attempts at social responsibility were "morally wrong," as social issues and concerns were best dealt with by government. In the last half century, highly publicized corporate behavior like the handling of the Exxon Valdez oil spill, the financial scandal of Enron, and the more recent subprime mortgage crisis has undermined trust in corporations. Social responsibility has taken on heightened importance as a way of building trust in relationships .

Oil Spill

Oil spills and other environmental disasters show the need for social responsibility.

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