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Corporate Social Responsibility
News
6.29.2004 ET
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Corporate Responsibility Initiatives Hit Limits
(CSRwire) Gearing Up, a new SustainAbility report launched on 29
June in Washington, DC at the United Nations Foundation, concludes that
despite achieving impressive momentum the corporate responsibility (CR)
movement is bumping up against real limits. Some responsible businesses
have scratched the surface of global issues like climate change and
HIV/AIDS, but just as many work to maintain the status quo. The efforts of
business, in combination with government and civil society, are quite
simply being outpaced by the problems. It's time for change.
SustainAbility's report - subtitled
From corporate responsibility to good governance and scalable
solutions - concludes that the CR movement is constrained by too
narrow a focus and the lack of appropriate links to wider global, regional
and national governance frameworks. Where links between companies and
government do exist, they are often dominated by regressive lobbying - the
automotive industry lobbying against effective action on climate change,
for example, or fast food companies lobbying to slow controls on their
industry. As such, industry or corporate public affairs activities are
often at odds with the declared CR initiatives of the same business.
Gearing Up is an insightful assessment of business progress by
people who work with business. On climate change, the report notes that a
few companies have made significant cuts in CO2 emissions, but globally
emissions have increased 8.9% since 1990, against a 60% reduction target.
On the health front, some companies are helping to fight HIV/AIDS by
providing anti-retrovirals to their employees. Yet in the poorest
countries, less than 10% of the six million people who need such drugs
currently get them. Too often, it's a case of too little, too late.
In order to make real progress, and reverse the unfolding backlash against
globalization, the authors call on Global Compact participants and other
leading companies to help drive system-level change. Business is generally
encouraged to stay out of politics, but the challenge business leaders face
is increasingly political. "Corporate responsibility has the potential to
bring about positive change on a much larger scale", agrees Georg Kell,
Executive Head of the Global Compact. "But to get there, the CR movement
will need to focus on two things simultaneously: achieving critical mass
across all industry sectors, and connecting private actions with public
policy efforts so that root causes of problems are tackled. CR cannot
operate in isolation any longer."
To make these connections in a legitimate way, companies must be more
transparent and consistent in their public policy positions - and they
will need to involve other interested parties. The report, which assesses
case studies on climate change, HIV/AIDS, chronic diseases and corruption,
encourages business leaders to:
- Increase transparency and demonstrate real progress in integrating CR
into core business operations
- Work alongside civil society and governments in 'progressive alliances'
to achieve public policy changes that directly address social and
environmental challenges
- Champion policies that ensure more responsible forms of
globalization.
Founded in 1987, SustainAbility (www.sustainability.com) is the
world's leading specialist consultancy on business strategy, corporate
responsibility and sustainable development.
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