creating an ethical space for business - presentation to asper school panel on the occupy movement

15
Alan Freeman An ethical space for Business The economic case

Upload: alan-freeman

Post on 01-Nov-2014

123 views

Category:

Education


3 download

DESCRIPTION

On December 8, Winnipeg's Asper School of Business organised a symposium on the Occupy movement and its significance for business. The school kindly invited myself and Radhika Desai to take part, and also invited a speaker from Winnipeg's Occupy movement, interestingly enough the only University department to do so. In the event, the Occupy speaker didn't show, but there was a fascinating discussion and a series of multi-faceted seminars in the school that followed it. There is also a web-side, whose location I'll post when I've found it. Especial thanks to Professor Hari Bapuji and his colleagues for their help in facilitating the event and the website

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Creating an Ethical space for business - presentation to Asper School panel on the occupy movement

Alan Freeman

An ethical space for Business

The economic case

Page 2: Creating an Ethical space for business - presentation to Asper School panel on the occupy movement

To judge the effect of inequality we need a comparatorWe are going through times of great changeThe recent past is not the best comparator

I focus on the possible futureI will judge the consequences of inequality

against what we could do if it we didn’t have itBut based on present trends.

This is an ethical vision, but…It’s a practical one

An evangelical approach

Page 3: Creating an Ethical space for business - presentation to Asper School panel on the occupy movement

The Living Wage policy in London – why is it so popular?The technology of creativity – why is it growing so fast?An ethical space: the capability for a new technological

age Investment in human beings yields the greatest marginal

increase in productivity.Makes possible a growth-led way out of crisis which is based

on human development instead of resource exhaustion.Not an inevitable future. We have to exercise choice.

Ethics thus informs governance, conduct, law and contractWe have to get out of the ‘age of machines’ and into the

‘age of creation’.

The evidence: a summary

Page 4: Creating an Ethical space for business - presentation to Asper School panel on the occupy movement

The lowest-paid in London should earn 40 per cent more than the poorest wage earners in the rest of the UK,

according to Boris Johnson.The city’s mayor has increased the London living wage, the optional minimum pay rate for the capital, to £8.30 ($13.84)

an hour, 40 per cent more than the current national minimum of £5.93 an hour.

The increase in the London rate of 45p, or more than 5 per cent, is the biggest annual increase since its introduction in 2005 in a sign of the increasing cost of living in the capital,

pushed up by the high level of inflation.

Financial Times May 2, 2011

Page 5: Creating an Ethical space for business - presentation to Asper School panel on the occupy movement

KPMG was named Living Wage Employer of the Year by London Citizens at their AGM in December 2010.  KPMG has paid the Living

Wage since 2006 and hosted a major event in

November at which Boris Johnson, Mayor of London,

urged more London businesses to sign up to pay their cleaning and contract staff at least a Living Wage (currently

£7.85 an hour)

KPMG ‘who we are’, 2010

Page 6: Creating an Ethical space for business - presentation to Asper School panel on the occupy movement

‘Efficiency gains’Reduced AbsenteeismLoyaltyLower Employee TurnaroundTraining and skills retention

Conventional economic theory ignores theseSee ‘Myth of Measurement’ and ‘Monopsony in

Motion

The technical blah

Page 7: Creating an Ethical space for business - presentation to Asper School panel on the occupy movement

Ford astonished the world in 1914 by offering a $5 per

day wage ($110 today), which more than doubled the

rate of most of his workers…

The move proved extremely profitable; instead of

constant turnover of employees, the best mechanics in

Detroit flocked to Ford, bringing their human capital

and expertise, raising productivity, and lowering

training costs …

Ford announced his $5-per-day program on January

5, 1914, raising the minimum daily pay from $2.34

to $5 for qualifying workers.

The proof of the pudding

Page 8: Creating an Ethical space for business - presentation to Asper School panel on the occupy movement

A new economic paradigm? How an exception is becoming a rule

Assets:

•The combined assets of the six largest content-driven conglomerates is larger than Exxon

Consumers

•Spending on creative and cultural products overtook that on food in 1994 and is now more than twice as large

Business

•Businesses now spend more on creative products than on financial services

Creativity

•The key resource employed by the sunrise creative industries is creative labour

Page 9: Creating an Ethical space for business - presentation to Asper School panel on the occupy movement

2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 20130

500

1,000

1,500

2,000

2,500

UK revenue from music

Recorded Primary Recorded SecondaryLive Primary Live Secondary

£million

The rise of content as a product

Page 10: Creating an Ethical space for business - presentation to Asper School panel on the occupy movement

What is creative capacity?

The productive paradigm has changed

The old idea that machines are replacing people has reversed

Design is kingThe main

required resource is people

Page 11: Creating an Ethical space for business - presentation to Asper School panel on the occupy movement

An ethical choice is a public choice Individuals can influence it: see The Economists’ Oath, Movements can influence it: the Occupy Movement

BUT: the Living Wage was public policy: a Mayor’s decisionNot just a moral injunction. It is a procurement policy.A contractual standard: a moral basis for all contracts

Economically Rational as well as morally soundBoosts the ‘ethical’ against the ‘bottom-feeding’ sector. These are the industries of the future Because they are investing in the productive resource of the

future.Conclusion: morality and practical economics now coincide.

Non-ethical contracts are bad both for business and for the people.

An ethical space must also be a public space.

Concluding remarks: the public and the ethical

Page 12: Creating an Ethical space for business - presentation to Asper School panel on the occupy movement

to the Asper School

to the Occupy Movement

And to the London Citizens Network

Thanks!

Page 13: Creating an Ethical space for business - presentation to Asper School panel on the occupy movement

Card, D.E., 1995. Myth and Measurement: The New Economics of the Minimum Wage, Princeton, N.J: Princeton University Press.

Manning, A., 2003. Monopsony in Motion. Princeton, N.J.:Princeton University Press.

George DeMartino: The Economist's Oath: On the Need for and Content of Professional Economic Ethics. Oxford: Oxford University Press

KPMG: www.kpmg.com/uk/en/whoweare/whatmakesusdifferent/ourawardsuccess/pages/default.aspx

GLA Living Wage Unit http://www.london.gov.uk/mayor/economic_unit/workstreams/living-wage.jsp

Citizens UK (UK national living wage campaign). http://www.citizensuk.org/campaigns/living-wage-campaign/

Freeman, A. Creativity in the Age of the Internet: http://ideas.repec.org/p/pra/mprapa/9007.html

Find out more

Page 14: Creating an Ethical space for business - presentation to Asper School panel on the occupy movement

Background data 1

Page 15: Creating an Ethical space for business - presentation to Asper School panel on the occupy movement

Background data 2