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![]() Whyte is not the first person to liken corporate philanthropy to thievery. Daniel Indiviglu, a writer for The Atlantic, wrote an article in January 2010 in response to Glaxo-SmithKline’s decision to release a large amount of intellectual property concerning anti-malarial research to the public domain. The intellectual property presented the public with details on about 13,500 chemical compounds that were identified to have the potential to act against the parasite that causes malaria in sub-Saharan Africa. Indiviglu questioned the integrity of this decision, stating the intellectual property had been financed as an investment by the company’s shareholders. He made the argument that the “Glaxo management [had] decided to take investor dollars and donate the profit that may come from it”—the profit that shareholders had perhaps invested in. Ultimately, he states that without “explicit shareholder approval, [it is] unclear how this is different from taking investors’ money and misappropriating it”. Many, however, claim that corporate philanthropy works to the shareholders’ benefit. A study conducted by Paul Godfrey at the Brigham Young University in 2005 concluded that corporate philanthropy actually adds to shareholder wealth, acting as an insurance policy for the company and protecting the shareholders’ investment in the event of a misfortune. While companies may be giving funds away to charitable organizations, they are also benefiting the shareholder’s interests by enhancing their company’s image. In some cases, this image enhancement plays a role in the company’s revenue increase, ultimately benefiting the shareholder. A 2008 study entitled “Is Doing Good Good for You?” concluded that corporations who were sensitive to consumer perception (usually when an individual is the predominant consumer), were very likely to see their charitable contributions significantly associated with future revenue. A 2010 social responsibility perceptions survey from Burson Marsteller and Penn Schoen Berland found that 55 percent of consumers say they are more likely to purchase products that support a certain cause. In certain cases, corporate philanthropy can attribute to increased revenue, thus serving the shareholder’s interests. This notion is an extension of a theory presented and evaluated in a 2006 study by Claremont McKenna College researchers titled “Corporate Philanthropic Practices.” The idea that corporate philanthropy actually helps the shareholder by adding value to their investment is called the “Value Enhancement Theory.” The other theory, called the “Agency-Cost Theory,” complements Whyte and Indiviglu’s arguments that corporate philanthropy indulges the management directing the funds while incurring an opportunity cost on shareholders. The study’s evidence supported the latter theory chiefly because it found the total amount donated by a corporation was positively correlated with the absolute size of the corporation’s board. Amidst the contention remains a finite fact: corporations are a significant contributor to the total giving in the United States. The most recent GivingUSA report shows corporate philanthropy and foundation giving represented 17% of the total $303.75 billion contributed in 2009. We want to hear from you: Is Corporate Philanthropy the same as stealing from shareholders, or is it a triple-win for bottom line, dividends, and communities? Do you know of corporations who engage shareholders in making grant determinations? If you like this kind of content, sign up for an NCoC.net account and we'll customize your homepage recommendations based on your interests..
By Jamie Kemmerer at 11:25 AM on Jul 23rd, 2010
This article opens up a huge number of issues, to many to cover thoroughly in a comment, but I'll raise a few:
1. If donating to charity is stealing because it takes away from the shareholder profit, then are bad business decisions stealing? Is a smoke break in front of the building stealing? Is talking about the football games over the weekend stealing? They all take away from shareholder profit. 2. Is shareholder profit all that really matters? I mean to even posit the question if charity is theft indicates a serious twisting of the American psyche. Is profit really that important? 3. If a shareholder invests in a company that makes charitable contributions, isn't that part of their investment? ie doesn't the shareholder derive some of the benefit or credit for the good works they are investing in? 4. Isn't profit itself a form of theft? If you really boil it down, how can profit be derived other than convincing consumers to pay more for a good or service than it is actually worth? It is the perceived value, not the actual value that yields profit. So doesn't charity offset some of the perceived value profiteering? 5. Examples like the BP Gulf catastrophe show in very stark terms how corporations can exact huge costs and penalties to a society and to the world. When viewed from this angle, the discussion of whether a corporation that decides to give back a little of their profit might be stealing from it's shareholders seems even more absurd. I don't mean to be extremely anti-business. I'm only trying to point out that there may be something other than profit. Furthermore, if you were to look at the total amount of money made by corporations and put that against the 17% those same corporations donate, one would be better served to ask the question if corporations are stealing, er I mean giving enough. |
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