Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- Acknowledgements
- Part I The Setting
- 1 The Context of Empowerment
- 2 The Indian Realities
- 3 Empowerment and Corporate Social Responsibility
- Part II Nature of Empowerment in Three Different Organisational Systems
- Part III Towards a Framework for Empowerment
- Select Bibliography
- Index
3 - Empowerment and Corporate Social Responsibility
from Part I - The Setting
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 November 2011
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- Acknowledgements
- Part I The Setting
- 1 The Context of Empowerment
- 2 The Indian Realities
- 3 Empowerment and Corporate Social Responsibility
- Part II Nature of Empowerment in Three Different Organisational Systems
- Part III Towards a Framework for Empowerment
- Select Bibliography
- Index
Summary
The raison d'etre of business is its economic contract with society – to create wealth through the production of goods and services which are consumed by the people. Conventionally, the success of business has been viewed in terms of profits it generates i.e. a purely financial, single bottomline measure. This has, however, changed over the years to view the success of business from several other measures besides profit. Profits are necessary and inevitable for the success of business but the way the profits are generated is equally important. The social, environmental, ethical, informational means and methods employed to generate profits have a bearing on the responsible and accountable behaviour of business. Thus, a concept of multiple bottomlines has evolved from these concerns to measure the success of business as multipurpose organisations set to achieve multiple objectives.
The Stakeholders Focus
Accompanying this change is the shift from viewing business as shareholder focused organisations to stakeholder focused organisations. The various stakeholders that a business is held accountable to include owners, customers, employees, environment, regulatory authorities, community, and society, at large. Business has to maintain a careful 30 Empowering Society balance between the demands and pressures of these various stakeholders, which can sometimes be conflicting in nature.
Peter Pruzan (2001) succintly identifies the distinctive features of these two views of organisation which he calls ‘shareholder value perspective’ and ‘stakeholder value perspective’:
From a shareholder-value perspective, the goal is to maximise shareholder value, primarily via a maximisation of profits. To achieve this end, the most efficient use must be made of the ‘instruments’ available. […]
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Empowering SocietyAn Analysis of Business, Goverment and Social Development Approaches to Empowerment, pp. 29 - 44Publisher: Foundation BooksPrint publication year: 2006