ARCH Canadian Voices on the Role of Business in Society

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account other considerations such as the environment; the long-term best interest of the corporation; and the interests of shareholders, employees, retirees and pensioners, creditors, consumers, and governments24. The wording of the amendment not only explicitly places other stakeholders and considerations on the same footing as shareholders; it also leaves the door open to an even larger list of stakeholders to be considered. As a result, the interest of different stakeholders may now be considered on the same level as profits for shareholders as corporate leaders in Canada decide what is best for the corporations they lead. Despite this newfound latitude, not all corporate leaders are living the stakeholder-centric model.

4) Stakeholder Approach in Theory, Shareholder Primacy in Practice “I see that shareholders and corporate structures trump societal values. We do have some companies out there that care, but they’re a minority.” – Jerry Dias, National President of Unifor With the latest string of developments stemming from statements made and steps taken by business leaders, the courts, and decision-makers, it appears that shareholder primacy has officially died. Be that as it may, this does not seem to be the case in practice. Even if there has been considerable movement in talk and action regarding the rebuking of the Friedman doctrine, there is still work to be done for other stakeholders’ interests to be considered with the same importance as shareholders. Several of the Survey Participants believe that still to this day, the overwhelming majority of corporate leaders are utilizing a model based on shareholder primacy. It is pointed out by a couple of Survey Participants that even the businesses which are signatories to the much-publicized BRT statement have not been adhering to the principles contained therein – and most likely will not be moving forward either. Eric Posner explained in The Atlantic, “While the statement is a welcome repudiation of a highly influential but spurious theory of corporate responsibility, this new philosophy will not likely change the way corporations behave.”25 In fact, Lucian Bebchuk and Roberto Tallarita of Harvard Law School have analyzed businesses that were signatories of the BRT statement of 2019 - only to find “little evidence (so far) that the declaration has altered corporate behaviour”.26 Despite the concept of a stakeholder model fermenting for decades, being supported by a large number of Canadian business leaders, and even being confirmed to some extent by Canadian courts and legislators, numerous Survey Participants exclaim it is still being ignored – or at least not fully implemented - by a large majority of business leaders in Canada. Walied Soliman, Canadian Chair of Norton Rose Fulbright, admits, “Ultimately, I think every CEO thinks about ownership first. And when they’re making a concession to customers, or a concession to employees, it’s with a view to this is going to make ownership happy.” It may be frustrating and even confusing for some to be told there is still much work to be done to have the role of business in society evolve when there is legislation in place which allows for Canadian corporate leaders to employ a more stakeholder model. Even so, it is the case.

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APPENDIX 3: SOCIETY AND BUSINESS INITIATIVES AROUND THE GLOBE

4min
pages 76-77

APPENDIX 5: REFERENCES AND FOOTNOTES

8min
pages 79-84

UNITED NATIONS SDGS

2min
page 78

APPENDIX 1: SURVEY PARTICIPANTS’ BIOGRAPHIES

14min
pages 68-73

APPENDIX 2: METHODOLOGY & BUSINESS INTERVIEW GUIDE

3min
pages 74-75

ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS

1min
page 67

CONCLUSION: THE IMPERATIVE TO ACT

2min
page 64

6) Leading on the Big Issues

15min
pages 58-63

5) Creating and Measuring Societal Value: The Role of the Sustainable Development Goals

8min
pages 54-57

4) Sharing Value Created

2min
page 53

3) Longer-Term Thinking

5min
pages 51-52

2) Increasing Focus on All Stakeholders

2min
page 50

4) Stakeholder Approach in Theory, Shareholder Primacy in Practice

5min
pages 47-48

3) The Purpose of the Canadian Corporation

2min
page 46

2) The Evolution of the Purpose of the Corporation

5min
pages 44-45

3) Future Prepping

2min
page 39

iv) Investors

2min
page 37

iii) Customers

4min
pages 35-36

i) Communities and Civil Society

3min
page 32

ii) Employees

4min
pages 33-34

4) Personal Legacy

2min
page 29

3) Impact on Their Business

5min
pages 27-28

2) Growing Criticisms of Capitalism

6min
pages 25-26

2) Creating and Sharing Value with Stakeholders

2min
page 31

2) Business is Critical to Solving Today’s Toughest Challenges

9min
pages 21-23

iii) Lack of Trust and Social Cohesion

2min
page 19

ii) Inequality and Inequity

0
page 18

INTRODUCTION

4min
pages 5-6

i) Climate Change

1min
page 17

AND BUSINESS MATTERS

0
page 15

EXECUTIVE SUMMARY

9min
pages 8-12

LEADERSHIP PROFILES

2min
pages 13-14

1) The Status Quo is Not Sustainable

1min
page 16

Who Is This For?

0
page 7
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