A brief look at the Guardian's recent 'Giving List' 

Among all the league tables and the sport of naming and shaming there is a
comparative newcomer � the Giving List. In the US since 1996 a league
table known as the Slate 60 of the top American philanthropists has been
published on the internet. An earlier list of Millionaire Givers ran into
legal problems of confidentially and has not been published since 1994.
The Guardian's Giving List offering us an insight into the generous and
the stingy among the top corporations quoted on the London stock exchange.

Much effort is devoted to giving capitalism an acceptable face. A new
industry has grown up around the idea and the practice of corporate social
responsibility (CSR). Better to give back to the victims part of the
proceeds of exploiting them than to be too greedy and to get a bad name.

It seems there are two views among supporters of capitalism about the best
way to run it and secure its future. We may call these views hard-line and
soft-line, although the protagonists rarely use those terms. The
hard-liners date themselves back to Adam Smith, with extensions to his
"invisible hand" by such as Margaret Thatcher, Milton Friedman and
lesser-known luminaries in the "new liberalism".

The basic proposition of the hard-liners is that the business of business
is making money, not employing people or giving them charity. The task of
companies is to maximise profit for their owners, the shareholders.
Appeals for companies to feel responsibility for the welfare of other
"stakeholders" � their employees, the local community, and the
environment�can only detract from the bottom line. It is argued that
widespread adoption of CSR would undermine the foundations of the market
economy.

The advocates of the CSR � the soft-liners � don't want to abolish the
market economy. They want to make it stronger by giving it a better image.
Their basic motive is still the promotion of "wealth creation" �
capitalist code for profit making. Digby Jones, writing on behalf of the
CBI, is frank about this: "Actions that affect beneficially on society
create an environment where people feel safer, and this helps business"
(Guardian, 6 November).

Socialists don't take sides in any conflict between those who want
"business" to accept more CSR and those who don't. CSR is just one among
many ways of reforming capitalism. Time and energy spent on discussing the
pros and cons of CSR is, from a socialist point of view, wasted and
deserves to be put in the dustbin of failed reforms alongside
nationalisation, public-private partnership, "fairer" taxation, and so on.

But there is one thing about CSR that can be of use to socialists. The
practice of social responsibility is at best an "add on" within capitalism
(the system is more recognisable for its social irresponsibility). With
socialism, social responsibility � concern for those doing the work, the
local community, the environment � won't be an "add on" to the system � it
will be a central feature of it. With the pursuit of profit and the
subservience of workers to capital off the agenda, we shall be responsible
for the kind of world we want to build and live in.

jt

www.worldsocialism.org


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