Thursday, September 17, 2015

FRIEDMAN'S BEST BUSINESS MODEL; YAH OR NAH?

Friedman’s Best Business Model
The Stockholder Theory

The Social Responsibility of Business is to make profit’ (1970) an article by Milton Friedman, which was published in The New York Times, has remained a highly controversial article and has ignited unending academic debates on business and ethics. Just as the title suggests, Friedman in this work condemns the argument of abandoning the primary objective of a business in a bid of becoming socially responsible. The Economist and noble laureate believes that the stakeholders who are either the customer or the employees could, on their own independent of the contribution of any business enterprise, spend their own money on any action they so desire, therefore businesses owe them nothing since they have invested nothing. Friedman argues that since the directors are agents, they must not use what is not theirs. In his view, business executives will be exercising a separate responsibility rather than serving as an agent of the shareholders if they spend money or behave in a socially responsible manner other than to maximize profit for its shareholders. This also purports that shareholders own the corporations.

Without any prejudice to the respected author, I bet to differ in his rather weak understanding of two important issues in this debate, a stakeholder and a company.  

One of the important issues that seek more clarification is the issue of who a stakeholder is; Friedman and other stockholder proponents have criticized the stakeholder theory without having to first determine on a wider scope, who a stakeholder is. According to Oxford Dictionary, A stakeholder is one with an interest or concern in something, especially a business.  By virtue of this definition; it then suggests that the investors, the shareholders, the employees, consumers and even the competitors are all stakeholders. Friedman and many other shareholder value thinkers in their arguments sound as though the stakeholder theory is there to erase the primary purpose of a business i.e. their economic responsibility. This is untrue; the stakeholder theory is only literally asking, what if the firm can make profit, which they actually can, and still serve public good?

According to Black’s Law Dictionary, Ownership is defined as “The bundle of rights allowing one to use, manage, and enjoy property, including the right to convey it to others."[1]

One must also bear in mind that ownership can only be effective where there is an object or thing capable of being owned. It might seem harmless to reify corporations for convenience but could also be misleading. Theoretically, a corporation cannot be classified as a thing or object capable of being owned but a legal fiction regarded as an artificial person by law, separate from its founders, capable of entering into a contract in its own name, having the ability to sue and be sued and also enjoys perpetual succession. A corporation enters into a voluntary contract in its capacity as an artificial person in the eyes of the law, between itself and the shareholders to whom he renders its services and this cannot at any point crystalize into ownership, as a corporation enjoys its legal personality statutes in perpetuity.      

I quite agree that shareholding has some ownership-like features that come with it, such as right to vote, right to transfer shares and the fiduciary duty owed by the directors and other executives of the corporation but this does not ipso facto mean ownership and even with all its ownership-like features, shareholding still lacks some very essential features of ownership. One would expect an owner of a property to be able to sustain an action for trespass over his property, should have the ability to acquire and use the corporation’s assets and finances, and the right to its income. Sadly, these features are never transferred alongside the share certificate to the shareholders. In W. Clay Jackson Enterprises v. Greyhound leasing and financial corp.[2], the court confirmed that the shareholders have no independent right capable of being violated upon the conversion of or trespass upon a corporate property. For example, a shareholder of A stores cannot prosecute a customer for shoplifting from the store, but the same shareholder can be prosecuted for shoplifting from A stores. The reason is simple; one cannot lay claims over what is not his or hers.[3]

In summation, it could be said that Friedman jumped pell-mell into conclusion without carefully evaluating the issues he discussed and the implication of his conclusion on a corporation such as compromising the long-term goals, corporate scandals and epileptic economic growth.






AUTHOR: Forster Ene, LLB. BL. LLM. ACIArb
Associate at Rockville & Co.
Email: Fene@rockvilleandco.com

[1] Black’s Law Dictionary (p. 1138).
[2] 463 F. Supp. 666, 670 (D.P.R 1979)… For one to claim ownership over a thing, such a person must have rights and liabilities over such property or thing. A dog owner has the right to protect anyone from possessing his or her dog and also has the responsibility to protect others from the dog. The same applies to a corporation; a corporation has the right to protect its properties from external interference and also has the responsibility to protect legal occupiers of its properties from avoidable harm.   
[3] See Lee, Ian. “Corporate Law, Profit Maximization and the ‘Responsible’
Shareholder.” 2005, Stanford Journal of Law, Business & Finance. March, p.11