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New briefing - Corporate
Law and Structures - Exposing the Roots of the Problem
Regular CW readers will already know that we think
the problem with corporations runs deeper than a little bad behaviour.
Now, for the first time, our new briefing offers an in-depth look at
the basic structural problems which lead corporations to commit such
widespread crimes against society and the environment.
Corporate law and structures begins by explaining
some key aspects of company law for the benefit of non-lawyers. Did
you know that:
- company directors’ most important legal
duty is to ‘act in the best interests of the company as a whole’
and that ‘the company as a whole’ means no-one but the
shareholders? This duty is interpreted in court to mean making as
much money for shareholders as possible and continuing to make money
in future. Theoretically directors can consider employees’ interests
as well, but the employees can’t force them to, so directors
tend to forget. It is actually unlawful (i.e. outside what they lawfully
should do) for directors to consider the interests of society and
the environment in any way which conflicts with making money. This
basic fact gets to the bottom of why corporate social responsibility
(CSR) doesn’t work: CSR relies on companies voluntarily doing
the right thing - but legally they can’t.
- in the UK, corporations have the same legal standing
as human beings - they can own property, bring legal cases, own shares
in other companies, be directors of companies, even solely own other
companies. Under the 1998 Human Rights Act, companies can claim rights
to a fair trial, to privacy, to freedom of expression, and to ‘enjoyment
of property’. All of this makes it extremely difficult to attack
corporate power in the courts, since companies not only have these
rights, but can afford to pay the best lawyers to defend and extend
them.
- it is extremely difficult to hold companies responsible
for crimes or civil offences because large companies structure themselves
(legally) so that legal liability falls on subsidiaries rather than
the parent company - it is almost as difficult to sue a parent company
for a subsidiary’s acts as to sue a shareholder for a company’s
acts. Thus paying for the cost of company activities - cleaning up
oil spills for example - falls on society instead of the company.
All of this and more is explained in detail in the
briefing, along with discussion of how corporations use the mythology
of CSR to pretend to be ethical ‘citizens’; how company
decision-makers avoid admitting responsibility for company crimes; and
most importantly, what changes could be made to company structures to
make them work in the interests of society rather than the interests
of money.
This structural analysis takes us beyond calls for
regulation (if companies don’t want to keep to regulations, their
main effect is to make yet more work for lawyers) and into a new questioning
of what our complex modern economic institutions should be trying to
do. Getting there will require time and a fundamental shift in power
across society. Let’s start it now - read the briefing, tell your
friends, inform your activism!
Order Corporate Law and Structures - Exposing the
Roots of the Problem from Corporate Watch - £2 per copy inc. P&P.
Or download the PDF
(750kb). |