home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- <text id=89TT1734>
- <title>
- July 03, 1989: Listen Here, Mr. Big!
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1989
- July 03, 1989 Great Ball Of Fire:Angry Sun
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- BUSINESS, Page 40
- Listen Here, Mr. Big!
- </hdr><body>
- <p>Corporate misbehavior is sparking a fevered outburst of consumer
- protests and boycotts
- </p>
- <p>By Christine Gorman
- </p>
- <p> For conscientious shoppers, finding the right product at the
- supermarket used to mean checking the prices, scrutinizing the
- salt content and looking out for saturated fats. But nowadays
- that's not all. Many consumers have added a new standard to
- their shopping lists: corporate responsibility. They may favor
- Campbell's Prego spaghetti sauce over Unilever's Ragu because
- Campbell runs a day-care center and Unilever invests in South
- Africa. Consumers are eating chicken instead of tuna salad
- because thousands of dolphins drown each year in tuna nets.
- They have put pressure on Uniroyal to halt distribution of the
- suspected carcinogen Alar, a chemical used to ripen apples and
- keep them crisp, which may have influenced the company's
- decision last month to take Alar off the U.S. market.
- </p>
- <p> After tolerating an anything-goes climate in business during
- most of the 1980s, "people are starting to demand that
- corporations live up to the expectations that we have of them as
- citizens," says Alice Tepper Marlin, executive director of the
- Manhattan-based Council on Economic Priorities. While most
- Americans still feel confident about the economy and business in
- general, consumers have become increasingly aggressive in taking
- corporations to task for misbehavior and irresponsibility. Among
- the concerns: investment in South Africa, environmental
- pollution, hazardous products, offensive TV programming and
- testing on animals. Today's campaigners for corporate
- accountability, unlike those in past consumer movements, are
- drawn from the mainstream and include activists who range from
- homemakers to corporate investors.
- </p>
- <p> A parade of highly visible corporate misdeeds has sparked
- the outrage. According to a study by sociologist Amitai
- Etzioni, a visiting professor at the Harvard Business School,
- two-thirds of FORTUNE 500 companies were convicted between 1975
- and 1985 of serious crimes, from price fixing to illegal dumping
- of hazardous wastes. Executives at Beech-Nut tried to pass off
- flavored water as apple juice. Ivan Boesky and a ring of Wall
- Streeters traded on insider information. Even such an
- upstanding company as Eastman Kodak, which has won awards for
- its minority-hiring and other social programs, has felt the
- heat. Residents of Rochester, where Kodak is based, have accused
- the company of covering up its chemical contamination of the
- city's groundwater.
- </p>
- <p> What set the stage for a backlash was the deregulation of
- such industries as airlines and broadcasting. While the
- loosening of rules typically brought consumers lower prices and
- wider choices, the process reduced governmental monitoring of
- business. In its free-market zeal, the Reagan Administration
- cut the budgets and staffs of the Federal Trade Commission, the
- Consumer Product Safety Commission and other supervisory
- agencies. In a Yankelovich poll conducted for TIME this year,
- nearly 80% of the Americans surveyed said the Government sides
- too often with business when it comes to environmental issues.
- </p>
- <p> The credibility of some businesses has been eroded during
- the 1980s by the greedy tendencies of corporate leaders and Wall
- Streeters. Takeover battles and buyouts have eviscerated
- hundreds of companies and cost thousands of employees their
- jobs while lining the pockets of many CEOs and investment
- bankers. From 1977 to 1987, executive pay and bonuses jumped
- 120%, vs. 80% for factory workers' wages. Says Elmer Johnson,
- a retired executive vice president of General Motors: "The best
- minds are not creating wealth but just transferring and churning
- it."
- </p>
- <p> At the same time, momentous accidents have reminded citizens
- that commonplace industrial activities have vast destructive
- power when companies are careless. The deadly chemical accident
- in Bhopal, India, groundwater contamination at Colorado's Rocky
- Flats nuclear-weapons plant and the oil slick from the Exxon
- Valdez all suggest that safety is too low a corporate priority.
- "That's why there was such a sense of outrage over the Valdez,"
- Johnson argues. "The consequences of mistakes are just so much
- greater today."
- </p>
- <p> To help consumers send a message to corporate America, the
- Council on Economic Priorities publishes a booklet titled
- Shopping for a Better World. The 132-page guide, which has sold
- 300,000 copies at $4.95 each, ranks 1,300 products and their
- manufacturers according to ten criteria, including the
- promotion of women and minorities, testing on animals and
- environmental sensitivity. Special commendations go to S.C.
- Johnson, maker of Raid, for banning ozone-depleting
- chlorofluorocarbons from its products. Dishonorable mention
- falls on pesticide manufacturers like Dow Chemical.
- </p>
- <p> Activists have become more sophisticated and effective in
- their protests. When Michigan homemaker Terry Rakolta was
- offended by Fox Network's raunchy Married . . . With Children,
- she threatened the program's advertisers with a boycott. The
- sponsors in turn pressured the fledgling network, which toned
- down its show. Animal-rights groups singled out the Draize
- test, in which dyes are injected into rabbits' eyes, in their
- effort to persuade the cosmetics industry to cut down on animal
- testing. Last week Avon Products announced that it would stop
- such experiments. Even Ralph Nader, the quintessential business
- basher, has adopted a more moderate approach. Nader, who last
- fall led the California revolt against excessive auto-insurance
- premiums, recently cited the auto industry and its suppliers
- for their joint quality-control efforts. Firestone, for
- example, allows automakers to inspect its plants and equipment.
- </p>
- <p> Many investors are influencing corporate behavior by putting
- their money where their morals are. Socially conscious
- investment funds now hold nearly $500 billion, up from $40
- billion in 1984, according to Gordon Davidson, head of the
- Social Investment Forum in Boston. Much of this nest egg
- belongs to pension funds like the $53 billion California Public
- Employees Retirement System. Their increasingly activist stance
- has strengthened the hand of the many religious groups that
- have waged an 18-year fight with corporations, seeking to
- influence policy through proxy battles at shareholders'
- meetings. Harrison Goldin, the comptroller of New York City and
- trustee of $30 billion in pension funds, led a campaign last
- spring to force Exxon's management to place an environmentalist
- on its board of directors.
- </p>
- <p> Many companies have taken heed of the grass-roots protests.
- The mishandling of the Exxon Valdez accident prompted the oil
- industry to announce last week the creation of a $250 million
- plan to prevent and clean up future spills. In the wake of
- Washington's defense-procurement scandals, Boeing beefed up its
- ethics committee. "It's a no-nonsense program," says committee
- head Malcolm Stamper, an aerospace veteran. "There's no
- winking. If we find out that a program official is obtaining
- marketing information improperly, we zap him."
- </p>
- <p> While many companies hsve been trying to live up to higher
- standards, industrial leaders face competing demands on their
- attention and resources. Executives are already struggling to
- keep up with foreign rivals, manage their debt and navigate
- safe passage through a flagging economy. Even so, consumers and
- politicians are getting their message across with growing
- earnestness and skill. Declares Nader: "The '90s will make the
- '60s pale into insignificance in terms of the reform drive to
- clean up the fraud, waste, abuse and crimes of many
- corporations." Corporate responsibility will no longer be a
- fringe benefit but an integral part of doing business.
- </p>
- <p>--Thomas McCarroll/New York and William McWhirter/Chicago
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
-
-