Friday, February 13, 2015

Control the Corporations Before they Completely Control Us

This was published today by Truth-out.org.

Adapted from the as-yet unpublished book by Dan Riker, now re-titled "Do What Works and Call it Capitalism"

The Growing Threat of Big Corporations and Multinationals

The corporation was a creation of government to provide a vehicle for economic growth. It was intended to provide a means of pooling capital from investors to develop businesses that would benefit the state by providing jobs and economic benefits. Corporations were more attractive to investors than partnerships because in a corporation the shareholders have no responsibility for the business's debts or other liabilities. Their potential losses are limited to their investment.
Almost from the beginning of the nation, it was considered a social good to have successful businesses providing employment, and tax revenues. Through a series of early Supreme Court decisions corporations received many of the same Constitutional protections as individuals, including property and contract rights. As a creation of the state, corporations have duties to the state. They are subject to its laws,regulations and taxes. However, contrary to some beliefs, the Supreme Court never has ruled that a corporation is a person. A chief justice in the 1880s said in dicta in a decision that they were, under the 14thAmendment, but that simply was his opinion, and it never has been validated by a decision.
In recent years, however, the Court has expanded the rights of corporations to include some previously only held by individuals, including the right to free speech. The Supreme Court's recent decision in Citizens United that permits corporations to make unlimited contributions in political campaigns expanded earlier decisions of the Court by ruling that there can be no limits on the amounts of money corporations contribute to political action groups because money is equivalent to speech, and speech cannot be limited. While rights of corporations have been expanded, their duties and responsibilities have not been. They are not subject to the restrictions imposed on governments in the Bill of Rights of the Constitution. They do not face the same kinds of penalties for violations of laws that people do.
If individuals committed the kinds of frauds that occurred as part of the subprime mortgage scandal they would go to prison, but the corporations involved just had to pay fines, fines they could easily afford. None of their officers, or directors, faced criminal charges.
The Citizens United decision has been quite controversial, and has been subject to considerable criticism. A movement is underway to amend the Constitution to limit the definition of corporations so that they do not have all the rights of individuals. Until that, or some other change occurs, the decision has given corporations more potential legal influence on politics and government than ever before.
With the ability to spend enormous amounts of money on behalf of political candidates, the huge multinational corporations that have little loyalty to the U.S., as well as extremely wealthy individuals, are positioned to exercise much greater influence on American governmental decisions at both the federal and state levels. Those decisions range from lowering taxes and regulation to giving private enterprises greater control over government functions through privatization. There is an enormous risk that far more activities of government will wind up being performed by profit-seeking businesses that do not face the same kind of public scrutiny and political control that government agencies do. Major industries also may obtain far greater control over natural resources and may be able to exploit them with less regulation, particularly environmental regulation.
The implications of the growing power of multinational corporations, and the continuing failure of governments to control them, still are not fully appreciated. This concentration of power is one of the worst legacies of the Reagan era, but one now shared with his successors. It is time to do something to control their behavior.

The Corporation of Today is not Your Father's Company

Just as the United States today is different from the country of our parents and grandparents, today's corporations are radically different from those of the “Gray Flannel Suit” of the 1950s. Management structures are different. Incentives are different. Career paths are different, if there are any. It is quite uncommon today for people to spend their careers with one company. Major areas of business generally are dominated by a small number of companies, oligopolies, and in the major industries those companies are multinationals.
 The Alfred P. Sloan, traditional vertical, or military-style, organization, with many layers of middle management, in use in most major corporations for much of the 20th Century, was abandoned late in the century. It was replaced by horizontal functional organizations requiring fewer layers of management, ultimately eliminating the jobs of many middle managers. The result was significant improvement in productivity, which began to show in the 1990s, but also the elimination of millions of middle-class jobs.
The expansions of the computer and telecommunications industries not only made it more feasible for corporations to move operations overseas, but for a period of time, the jobs created in the U.S. in these new fields masked the impact of the loss of more traditional jobs. But millions of manufacturing and customer services jobs disappeared, either from relocation to foreign countries, or as the result of automation.
During the Reagan, George H.W. Bush and Clinton Administrations, there were a number of developments that had an enormous impact of any on the way corporations were managed.
In 1977, Alfred D. Chandler, Jr., a Professor at the Harvard Business School, was awarded the Pulitzer and Bancroft Prizes the "The Visible Hand; The Managerial Revolution in American Business.The title comes from Adam Smith's use of the term “the invisible hand” which he said was the “market” guiding business decisions. Chandler's thesis, backed by a comprehensive study of the growth of American business from the start of the Republic to the second half of the 20thCentury, was that once modern corporations appeared in the 1850s – the railroads and the telegraph companies – the “invisible hand” was replaced by professional managers.
Over time, those professional managers became such a force in the governance and direction of American corporations that their interests, including those of other employees, were served even more than those of the shareholders, despite the fact that the legal responsibility of corporations was to shareholders. No state law imposed a fiduciary responsibility on a corporation to its employees, or to the communities where it operated.
The presence and power of this class of professional manager was a major factor in long life spans for successful companies, lifetime employment for many employees, and generous, but not outrageous, compensation and benefits. Steady stock growth was important, but quarter-to quarter performance was not the prime focus of management. Stock options and other performance-based forms of compensation were not as significant as they are today. Most large companies had their own pension programs, which further encouraged lifetime employment.

401Ks and the End of the "Three-Legged Stool" of Retirement

Several other developments influenced investors in the 1980s to become more demanding. Corporations came under greater pressure to maximize shareholder returns by improving stock performance, especially quarter-to-quarter performance.
The development of 401-K plans in the 1980s, which greatly expanded investment in mutual funds, contributed to increasing attention paid to the stock performance of companies. As 401-K plans have become ubiquitous, so has the demand for stock performance. [1]
The growth of 401-K plans may also have had an unintended consequence. The 401-K plans had enormous appeal to employers as replacements for the pension plans they had to fund. With 401-K plans they contributed a certain percentage of their stock to the employee's account, and then had no further obligation.  Unions also liked them because they gave employees a greater share of company ownership. Unlike pensions, the 401-K plans were portable. Employees who left a company could "roll-over" their old 401K into the new employer's plan. The great percentage of a 401-K plan usually is invested in mutual funds. The company's stock contributed to the plan could be exchanged for mutual funds as well. The 401-K plans as replacements for pension funds not only lessened the ties between employees and their employers; they also created a huge pool of mutual fund investment that forced changes in corporate management.
The ending of pensions in many companies meant that one of the legs if the "three-legged stool" of retirement, as contemplated in the 1930s when Social Security was enacted, effectively was eliminated. The original concept of Social Security was that it would represent one of the legs of a "three-legged stool" of retirement, the other two being savings and pensions. The 401K is a savings plan, but it has been used to replace pensions, thus reducing the stool to two legs. And many 401K plans have not been successful, thus reducing the stools of retirement for many of their participants to just one: Social Security. And for this reason, there will be growing pressure to increase Social Security benefits.

Greater Pressure on CEOs to Focus on Quarter-to-Quarter Performance

Within a few years of the advent of 401Ks more than 50% of the stock of public companies was held by mutual and pension funds, rather than by individuals. Unlike many traditional individual investors,institutional investors have little emotional attachment to the companies in which they invest. Their only interest is in buying stocks that will increase in value, and, in many cases, the increases are expected in the near term. If companies do not perform as expected, or better, their stocks are dumped, and their stock prices decline, sometimes substantially.
This increased emphasis on short-term stock performance put enormous pressure on CEOs to improve their bottom lines and keep their stock prices rising, on a quarter-to-quarter basis. Corporations thinned out their management ranks, and looked for other ways to improve profits, such as shifting operations to less expensive foreign countries.
In 1992, the Securities and Exchange Commission promulgated new regulations of executive compensation of public companies requiring greater disclosure and justification based on company performance. In 1993, the corporate tax code was modified regarding executive compensation. Under Section 162(m) the amount of a corporate executive's salary in excess of $1 million could not be tax-deductible unless it was based on performance, and was disclosed to shareholders and approved by majority vote. Neither regulation worked. Executive salaries continued to escalate. Companies either figured ways to comply with the regulations, frequently tying compensation to stock performance, or they ignored them. [2] The regulations did provide greater motivation for corporate executives to focus on short-term performance and the stock price.
These different, and varied, pressures on executives to maximize short-term results had that effect. Increasing shareholder value - mostly through increasing the stock price, but sometimes meaning selling the company - became the primary duty of corporate senior managements, at the expense of all other stakeholders, and sometimes the longer-term interests of the company. Quarter-to-quarter stock performance became the most important measure of success. It provided a justification for massive increases in CEO, and senior executive, compensation keyed to stock performance.

The Short-Term Focus Limits Longer Term Opportunities

With such a short-term focus, there is little incentive for companies to take chances on higher risk ventures, technologies, or innovations that require years to produce results. More patient foreign companies, with longer horizons, have gained great advantage. For example, many Japanese companies typically operate on a 20-year business plan. American companies operate on much shorter plans, usually not longer than five years, and almost never longer than ten. The investment community, which provides the capital for start-ups and expansion, usually has even shorter horizons for obtaining returns on its investments. This made it very difficult for an American company to raise capital to develop advanced technologies that might take five to ten years, or longer, to produce profits.
A good example is what happened to Zenith, once upon a time one of America's most famous electronics companies. Zenith invented the flat-screen for television, and received an Emmy Award in 1981 for it. But Wall Street would not provide Zenith with the capital it needed to take the product to market, and Zenith sold its interests. Zenith also was a pioneer in the development of high-definition television, but it never took a product to market. Eventually, LG, the South Korean giant, purchased Zenith, which now operates as a subsidiary. But along with Zenith, and others, the United States lost the entire electronics industry. The people with the money did not see a quick enough return for them in the American companies.
Following that pattern of consumer electronics, many fast growing areas of high tech and precision technology became the specialties of countries more willing to wait for longer term payoffs, including Japan, South Korea, Germany, Canada, Finland, Sweden, and, more recently, China. Most personal computers, cell phones, and wireless transmission equipment, are manufactured outside the U.S., including the sensationally successful Apple I-Phone and I-Pad.

Takeovers and Consolidations and the Emergence of the "B" Corporation

The demand for quarterly performance also meant that if the stock price of a company with solid assets and good cash flow stopped increasing at the pace expected by Wall Street the company could become a target for a takeover. Such takeovers often resulted in a break-up of a company's assets, and the laying off of most, if not all, of its employees. Such takeovers usually bring a premium on the current stock price and are justified by company management as the only way to maximize shareholder value.
With fiduciary duties of the corporate management entirely to shareholders, no consideration is required to the communities where companies operate for the benefits the communities may have provided to the corporations, nor to the dependencies and loyalties of employees.
In recent years there has been a movement to change this state of affairs. Approximately thirty states have adopted “Constituent statutes” that permit corporate managements to consider factors other than shareholder returns when making major decisions. In 2010 Maryland adopted a new form of corporation, the “Benefit” corporation, also known, slightly incorrectly, as the “B Corporation.” Many other states and the District of Columbia have since adopted similar legislation. This form of corporation is a hybrid between a for-profit and a non-profit corporation. The corporate commits to providing a “public service” and the fiduciary responsibility of the management is extended beyond shareholders to other stakeholders, including employees, communities, and the public in general. Actions can be brought against the management of these companies to enforce this broader range of responsibility.
These changes have been heralded as injecting a new sense, and a new opportunity, in business for social responsibility. If universally adopted, these changes hold the promise of ending the period of almost mindless commitments of companies to short term profits, and may slow down corporate mergers and acquisitions. However, it remains to be seen if these changes in fiduciary responsibilities have a chilling effect on capital sources. All companies need capital, and some need a great deal. Some types of investors, particularly mutual funds, may not find this type of corporation particularly attractive.

Laissez-Faire + Deregulation = Multinational Consolidation

As a result of the laissez-faire and deregulation practices of Reagan and his successors, consolidation within industries accelerated.  The Federal Communications Commission eliminated many of the regulations of broadcasting, including equal time and fairness doctrine rules that required broadcasters to make time available for different points of view. The FCC also eliminated most restrictions on ownership, which permitted massive consolidation of ownership of broadcast stations and networks, greatly reducing competition and access to the media by all points of view.
The lack of enforcement of antitrust laws accelerated the formation of giant multinational corporations that now own most of the major brand names. And because of the rapid expansion of economies around the world since the end of the Cold War, many multinational corporations no longer rely on the American market for the majority of their revenues, or profits, and, as a result, have less loyalty to America, if they have any. Resources are focused where they are likely to produce the greatest profits, and recently, that has not been in the United States.
There are only 27 countries with GDPs higher than the gross revenues of the three largest corporations, Royal Dutch Shell, Exxon-Mobil, and Walmart. Most of the world's countries have lower GDPs than the 25 corporations that have revenues greater than $142 billion. Those 25 corporations include 11 oil and gas companies (3 U.S.), four auto manufacturers (1 U.S.), two diversified manufacturers (1 U.S.), two national public utility companies, one commodities dealer, one insurance company, one retailer (U.S.), one financial institution, one national postal service and one conglomerate (U.S.). Only the two public utility firms (China and Italy) and Japan's postal service are not “multinational,” operating in many countries. The one conglomerate, Warren Buffet's Berkshire Hathaway, primarily is an investment company, and its largest investments are in American companies. [3]
The existence today of multinational corporations so huge that their incomes are larger than most countries is one of the most significant business developments in modern history that has yet to be fully understood and evaluated. Many of these corporations operate almost entirely independent of any nation's laws, and essentially are virtual countries, without the restrictions and limitations that real ones have. Some, like Exxon-Mobil, have their own armed forces.
Collectively, multinationals control trillions of dollars and much of international trade, banking and commerce. They have the power today to destroy the economies of countries, if they choose to do so, or to exercise such influence that they virtually own countries. There have been a number of cases of large-scale currency manipulations.

The Dangers of Corporate Power in Politics and Government

Corporations already play large roles in domestic U.S. politics. Given the Supreme Court's Citizens United ruling, if they chose to, they could play even bigger roles. While the oil companies contribute large amounts of money to Congressional political campaigns, most have not played major roles in Presidential elections. But, it isn't accidental that Republicans chant “drill, baby, drill.” They have been paid to do so by the oil industry.
The oil industry tries to shape American opinion about it and its primary products through advertising and opinion making. The oil industry has spent millions of dollars on television ads to persuade Americans that fracking is a safe means of recovering natural gas, and that offshore drilling, sand and shale oil will be economical replacements for foreign oil. One of their slick advertisements has a smooth-talking, attractive woman, assuring Americans that all this oil means “a bright future” for American energy.
Corporations like Exxon-Mobil also provide funding to think tanks, and to research projects, to try to develop support for their positions through scholarly research, and publications. Some of this work is used behind the scenes in the oil industry's lobbying against environmental regulation and restrictions that might help to prevent, or at least, mitigate the numerous hazards oil and gas development entail, including massive oil spills, pollution of fresh water aquifers, and now, because of fracking, earthquakes. Some of the scholarly opinion that questioned the validity of climate change theories also was financed by energy company funds.
The Koch brothers, whose father was one of the founders of the ultra-right wing John Birch Society, and who now control Koch Industries, the second-largest privately held corporation in the United States, have gained great influence over prominent think tanks such as the Heritage Foundation, and Cato Institute and they have provided funds directly, and indirectly, to a network of regional think tanks, as well as to a number of universities. They also have spent hundreds of millions of dollars on behalf of Republican candidates, and financed dishonest television ads against the Affordable Care Act.
ALEC, The American Legislative Exchange Council, which represents many prominent corporations, writes generic legislation for state legislatures, particularly Republican-controlled state legislatures. Some of the most notorious laws resulting from their work have been the “stand your ground” and voter ID laws. [4]
As long as oil is the primary fuel of the United States, it will be important to have successful oil companies. However, much tougher regulation is necessary, particularly in areas such as offshore drilling, where the oil companies have proven they do not have the technology to deal with massive oil spills. As we have seen in the Gulf of Mexico and with the Exxon Valdez, oil spills are with us forever, continuing to do damage to the environment and to us. The risks of major oil spills in pristine areas such as Alaska, or the Atlantic Coast are too great to justify any oil drilling. No additional offshore oil drilling anywhere should be permitted.
A great example of how government laws and regulations can be manipulated to favor private interests is evident with what happened with fracking regulation.
The following is the beginning of the Executive Summary of a study of these exemptions:

"The oil and gas industry enjoys sweeping exemptions from provisions in the major federal environmental statutes intended to protect human health and the environment. These statutes include the:

• Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation, and
Liability Act
• Resource Conservation and Recovery Act
• Safe Drinking Water Act
• Clean Water Act
• Clean Air Act
• National Environmental Policy Act
• Toxic Release Inventory under the Emergency Planning and
Community Right-to-Know Act

This lack of regulatory oversight can be traced to many illnesses and even
deaths for people and wildlife across the country. There are a variety of
chemicals used during the many phases of oil and gas development. These
chemicals also produce varying types of waste throughout these processes.
Because of the exemptions and exclusions, toxic chemicals and hazardous
wastes are permeating the soil, water sources and the air threatening human health to an alarming extent. The geological and environmental issues of fracking, and the potential for catastrophic pollution, need far greater examination and regulation."

This is a perfect example of where substantially increased government regulation of corporate behavior is critically needed. The restrictions on the EPA in this area must be lifted. Fracking must be brought under much greater scrutiny.

Consolidate U.S. Regulation To Fight Consolidated Multinationals

It is time for the United States federal government to become far more aggressive in controlling and regulating multinational corporations and international business activity before it becomes so large and so independent that it is beyond control.  These giant multinationals are a threat to free enterprise and to democracy. They are enemies of both, and, increasingly they are using their economic and political power to stifle competition, and to make themselves more dominant.
There has been massive consolidation within nearly every industry during the past 30 years. Even though the GDP has tripled since 1975, there are 18 percent fewer stocks traded today than there were 40 years ago. In consumer products and food, one chart shows how ten companies now control virtually everything we buy. True competition is vanishing from the consumer marketplace.
There is no one agency in the federal government responsible for the regulation of corporations. That responsibility is divided among various cabinet departments and independent agencies, each regulating different aspects of businesses. When created in 1913 to replace Theodore Roosevelt's Bureau of Corporations, part of Commerce Department, the Federal Trade Commission was supposed to enforce the Antitrust Laws. In fact it was created to enforce the Clayton Anti-Trust Act, which was adopted with it. For the most part the FTC has not played that role. Its focus in recent years primarily has been on consumer protection.  Various studies of the FTC's history have been highly critical.
The Justice Department today is the lead organization for enforcement of the antitrust laws, but antitrust actions are seldom taken. As a result, during the last 30 years there has been consolidation of industries on a scale not seen since the trust days of the late 19th and early 20th Centuries. Now, those consolidations occur on an international level creating business entities of such enormous scale that they are almost beyond regulation.
It is time to change the regulation of corporations by consolidating most regulation in one department, as Theodore Roosevelt did.
Regulation of corporations by the federal government is tricky because corporations do not get their authority to go into business from the federal government. They get their authority from the state where they file their charter. The federal government's authority over corporations comes primarily from the Commerce Clause, which gives the power to regulate commerce "among the states" to the federal government. For a long time, due to various Supreme Court decisions, it was difficult for the federal government to regulate businesses that were not engaged in interstate commerce. Later decisions of the Court opened up federal regulation of many areas, but with the current Court's conservative majority's recent attempts to limit the scope of the Commerce Clause, changes in federal regulation of business must be carefully constructed.
The federal government clearly has Constitutional power to regulate the actions of corporations and individuals when it comes to public health and safety, including the environment, and the effects of their actions on natural resource on public lands, including water supplies. The federal government has clear authority to prevent monopolies and constraints on free enterprise. There is plenty of Constitutional room to do what needs to be done.

New and Tougher Regulation

Substantially increased federal regulation of corporations is critically necessary to the survival of the American democratic republic. That includes restrictions on the roles corporations can play in government. Conflict-of-interest and full disclosure requirements must be imposed on both corporations doing business with the government and with all government officials, including members of Congress. We are very close now to almost complete corporate control of America. All it might take to eliminate the word "almost" is the election of a conservative Republican President.
American corporations must be discouraged from moving operations out of the country, rather than encouraged, as they have been by trade deals and government policies. No more trade deals should be approved without much greater protections for American workers.
For companies that are not in financial distress, but simply are seeking ways to increase profits, the cost of closing plants to relocate functions outside the country should be increased substantially, so that it isn't profitable to do so. Relocating plants of successful companies from the United States to countries with lower-wage workers should be subject to various penalties, including excess profits taxes and long-term financial compensation to laid off workers and to the communities where the companies were located.
To reduce the attraction of moving jobs offshore, very high tariffs should be applied to any products made by those new foreign facilities that the company wants to import into the U.S., so that there is no financial benefit of employing slave labor, or workers at extremely low wages, in other countries in place of American workers.
It should become national economic and foreign policy that the United States will not permit any company operating in the U.S. to benefit from the employment of slave labor, or from severe exploitation of impoverished workers in other countries. This should apply to retailers such as Walmart and K-Mart/Sears that purchase a huge amount of products from China, some of which may have been manufactured in “labor” camps, prisons for political prisoners, or others the Chinese government wants restrained. China recently announced it planned to close the labor camps, but there still are huge manufacturing facilities in China that operate almost the same, with workers forced to work extraordinarily long hours at very low ages.
No retailer should be allowed to import products from other countries when the only distinction the product has versus American competitors is that it costs less because of significantly lower wages. Not only would such a policy benefit American industry, and improve the American economy, it would equally benefit the economies, and peoples, of many other countries.
Finally, there should be severe economic consequences to any American company that moves its headquarters offshore to avoid taxes, including restrictions on their ability to do business in the U.S. Equally, there should be rewards for companies to locate their headquarters in the U.S. and make themselves subject to U.S. taxes.
In his 2015 budget, President Obama proposed a new system of taxing the offshore profits of American corporations at lower rates that, if enacted, could generate hundreds of billions of dollars in new revenue over a period of time, and enable corporations to repatriate profits at lower cost. The odds that the Republican Congress will enact his proposal probably are not very good.

Conclusion

The history of capitalism shows that great abuses always have resulted from great concentrations of economic power, and there is no reason to believe they will not occur again, but now it could occur on a scale never before imagined. It is time for Congress to review government regulation of corporations with a goal of learning from them by consolidating regulation in one agency charged with increasing the scrutiny of antitrust behavior, and behavior that endangers the financial and political stability of the United States. Congress also should eliminate exemptions from regulations that the oil and gas industry have received, and should adopt the other regulations discussed above.
These changes are unlikely to happen so long as Republicans control Congress. The issue of the threat - and the effects - the real effects on us - of corporate dominance of government must become a political issue. The conflicts-of-interest of Republican members of Congress who gain financially from actions they take on behalf of wealthy corporations must be exposed. The exemptions from regulation are a scandal that never has gotten the attention and focus it should have. Fracking is a national danger and it must become a political issue. We need oil, but at what cost?
Democrats must step up. They must cut their ties to the multinationals and the big banks. They must stand up for the people. They must organize to defeat the Republicans, regain control of Congress and stop the corporate takeover of America.

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[1] [1] See Gelter, Martn. “The Pension System and the Rise of Shareholder Primacy” June 7, 2012.http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=2079607 in which the author argues that the development of the 401-K is a prime cause of the conversion of “managerial capitalism” to “shareholder capitalism,” the changes of the focus of corporate management from its own interests to an almost exclusive focus on the interests of shareholders.
[2] For a comprehensive review of the failure of the IRS regulation to control executive compensation see, Steven Balsam. Taxes and Executive Compensation. Economic Policy Institute, Aug. 14, 2012. Briefing Paper #344.http://s1.epi.org/files/2012/BP344_Taxes_and_Executive_Compensation.pdf 

[4] Extensive information about ALEC athttp://www.alecexposed.org/wiki/ALEC_Exposed

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