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Corporate Social Responsibility
News
7.19.2005 ET
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New Study On Link Between Lobbying And Corporate Responsibility
(CSRwire) WASHINGTON - WWF and SustainAbility launch a ground breaking report
that reveals the strength of links between the corporate responsibility
practices and government lobbying and public policy activities of 100
major global corporations.
The report, Influencing Power, ranked the world's top 100 companies on the
transparency of their lobbying activities and whether it demonstrates
support for their public statements on Corporate Responsibility. This is
often a murky world where companies can portray themselves to be
responsible in their corporate communications to the public, but behind
the closed doors of government they oppose their public image by doing
everything in their power to prevent or slow down public policy progress
towards sustainability.
Results show that US businesses are in the forefront when it comes to
openness about lobbying government, a vital step for a sustainable society
and gaining the trust of the public. Only the UK fared better in this
respect, while other industrial countries like France and Japan lagged
behind. In Japan, of the 12 companies in the survey only one, Toyota, made
any reference to the issue of lobbying.
"If society is to become sustainable it is vital that corporate
responsibility practices should be explicitly linked with a company's
lobbying and public policy activities," said Jules Peck, WWF Global Policy
Advisor. "With weak and contradictory links between these activities
businesses will continue to be hit by scandal after scandal and the
public's trust in them will continue to ebb away."
Nearly all of the top scoring businesses are from sectors such as Energy,
Materials and Health Care, which have heavy direct social and
environmental impacts. This is perhaps not too surprising, given that
these sectors receive a significant amount of scrutiny from
non-governmental organizations, socially-responsible investors and
governments, and so are more likely to have the issue on their agenda.
Conversely, companies in Financial and Telecommunication sectors, that
until recently have been considered low impact sectors, receive some of
the lowest average ratings.
At a company level fifty percent of these multinationals are providing
some degree of transparency around lobbying activity, a clear improvement
over the last five years. But the research also found many worrying
examples of disjointed company practice, for example GlaxoSmithKline, Ford
and General Motors(1), where government lobbying contradicted the company's
public position.
No company reveals the amount it pays to professional lobbyists, although
the amounts are staggering. In 2004 alone, the collective invoices of
Washington lobbyists were likely to have exceeded $3 billion. In Europe an
estimated 15,000 lobbyists represent a 60-90 million euro industry, but no
comprehensive figures are available as disclosure only takes place on a
voluntary basis.
The report found that most companies were still considered to have an
outmoded business view where government policy and regulation are seen
primarily as limiters or threats to existing markets and business
practices.
"While companies like BASF, Chevron, Dow, Ford, General Motors and
GlaxoSmithKline all ranked well on transparency", said Jodie Thorpe,
Senior Advisor at SustainAbility, "their focus is generally on defending
often controversial positions rather than on how corporate responsibility
and related policy activities can support core business strategies".
There are, however, isolated cases of companies viewing corporate
responsibility as a way of standing out to the public and recognizing the
potential for public policy to help create new markets. The report found
emerging evidence of best practice -- such as ABN Amro, BP, HSBC and Royal
Dutch/Shell as part of The Corporate Leaders Group on Climate Change(2) -
but these examples are few and far between.
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