In a discussion at lunch today, [livejournal.com profile] luckylefty quipped that Google's motto should be changed to "Don't be evil (except as required to maximize shareholder value)." I've heard this notion before, that a public company is legally required to do whatever is necessary to maximize its profits, and could be sued by its shareholders for not doing so. This reminded me of a quote I ran across recently by [livejournal.com profile] costikyan (from a couple years ago, in the context of computer game companies and the overabundance of licensed games):
Tom Peters, the business guru, echoes the sentiment: No successful business exists to produce a profit. Yes, you need to produce a profit; in a capitalist system (and thank god we have one), profit is the condition of survival. But profit isn't the goal; no one other than the stockholders get excited at that. A corporation is one way or organizating a group of people to strive toward an objective—but that objective, the vision they share, is always, for successful businesses, something other than mere profit.
It seems unlikely to me that a corporation does not have the freedom to reject certain highly profitable avenues if it chooses—pornography is one of the most lucrative industries these days, so can shareholders sue Google for not launching Google Smut? Or is the only defense that it might tarnish their public image enough to hurt the rest of their business model?

From: [identity profile] mshonle.livejournal.com


I would only add to that that government is essential to have around in order to protect property rights (-land, -resource, -intellectual, or otherwise). It's also good at providing public goods where there would be a free-rider problem (like education, national defense) or where it would be too risky for companies to provide the good (like funding research like string theory; it could be billions spent on something that becomes nothing at all, though it may be important).

Good point about the socially responsible investments, too. Union pension funds and church and non-profit school endowments are a significant portion of the market, which does have power.

As for my favorite financial company, I like Vanguard. Vanguard was one of the few companies not to have any legal troubles with frauding investors (frauding like Merrill Lynch did, talking up a stock while privately ridiculing it). What makes Vanguard different is that the Vanguard customers are also the Vanguard shareholders. It's practically a co-op. So the incentive always was to do what was in the customer's best interests instead of the executives.
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