The smart CEO's guide to social justice
It seems as though profit-maximizing business
people ought to be speaking up loudly and often for three changes in our
culture, changes that while making life better also have a dramatically
positive impact on their organizations.Minimum Wage: Three things worth noting:
- Most minimum wage jobs in the US can't easily be exported
to lower wage places, because they're inherently local in nature.
- The percentage of the final
price of a good or service due to minimum wage inputs is pretty low.
- Many businesses sell to
consumers, and when they have more money, there's more demand for what
they sell.
The climate upredictability tax is large, and it's going to get bigger, in erratic and unpredictable ways.
Decreasing carbon outputs and increasing energy efficiency are long-term investments in global wealth, wealth that translates into more revenue and more profit.
Anti-corruption movements: The only players who benefit from corruption in government are the actors willing to race to the bottom--the most corrupt organizations. Everyone else is forced to play along, but is unlikely to win. As a result, for most of us, efforts to create transparency and fairness in transactions are another step toward efficient and profitable engagements.
Historically, when cultures clean up their acts, get more efficient and take care of their people, businesses thrive. It's not an accident, one causes the other.
In all three cases, there's no political or left/right argument being made--instead, it's the basic economics of a stable business environment with a more secure, higher-income workforce where technological innovation leads to lower energy costs and higher efficiency.
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