The concept of stakeholder
Stakeholders:
Narrow definition: Groups without whose support the business would cease to be viable
Broad definition: Any group or individual that can affect or be affected by the realization of the organization’s purpose
Stakeholder Theory
1. Fallacy of separation thesis: Discourse of business and discourse of ethics cannot be separated
2. Moral claim: Stakeholders have moral claim on corporations because corporations have potential to harm or benefit them
3. People as ends, not means: Managers should make decisions respecting stakeholders’ well-being rather than treating them as means to a corporate end (Evan and Freeman, 1993)
- Narrow definition → primary stakeholders
- Stakeholder theory saying: should accomadte different claims of stakeholders participating
- Second assumption: stakeholders have moral claims for the corporation, ethical rights the corporation should follow
- Third assumption: people are seen as ends not means, people are not means
Input-output model vs. stakeholder model
- Shareholder theory: all profits are owed to the investors
- Stakeholder theory: stakeholders are seen as ends, have moral claims, not seen only what they can provide
Ethical arguments in favor of stakeholder theory
Utilitarianism: Recognizes stakeholders’ (not only shareholders’) interests are joint
Ethics of duties: People as ends, not means to corporations’ ends
Ethics of rights: shareholders’ rights cannot overrule other stakeholders’ rights
Character or virtue ethics: Business virtues (eg., efficiency, fairness, respect, integrity, keeping commitments) are critical in being successful at creating value for stakeholders
Pragmatism: Society is richer if we can create a conversation about how to live together better; business as a form of collaboration
Stakeholder theory criticism
Identification of stakeholders
Multitude of definitions: no required ethical content to define relevant stakeholders
Broad view of stakeholders: ecological scope (everything is connected to everything else) with no clear boundaries
- very different to identify them and asses if a claim is ethical or not
Vagueness and overbreadth:
good for everyone and no one; “stakeholders’ interests must be balanced” contains vague terms
Balancing without objectives:
an impossible managerial quest because stakeholders’ interests may not align – how to resolve conflicting, unethical, unreasonable interests?
Polluters Dilemma - Takeaways
Changing conditions, changes the ways to prioritize stakeholders
Process innovation
Big corporations: 1st movers in process innovation (strong empirical evidence): they are very visible to media and NGOs that can destroy their legitimacy and (b) gain advantage, using visibility
Small companies: don’t have visibility, followers adapting to industry standards
Product innovation
Small companies: 1st movers because they are more flexible and develop a distinctive value proposition
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