Short answer? No.
By
Phil Mattera for the Dirt
Diggers Digest
In the wake of the killing of George Floyd by Minneapolis police in May 2020, Corporate America pledged to spend billions of dollars to address systemic racism.
Surveying
the 50 U.S. largest companies (based on stock market valuation), the Post found
that 44 of them pledged a total of $4.2 billion in donations and committed
another $45.2 billion in loans, investments and other initiatives. More than
one year later, the companies reported disbursing only $1.7 billion.
The
slow movement of the funds should not be taken as an indication that the
commitments were a burden on the firms. As the Post points out, the $4 billion
cash portion represented less than one percent of the aggregate annual profits
of the 50 companies.
Much of the $45 billion in other commitments, 90 percent of which came from Bank of America and JPMorgan Chase, represented loans and investments on which the companies would make a profit.
Moreover, providing home mortgages and other
financial services in Black and Latino neighborhoods is something the banks
were already supposed to be doing under federal laws such as the Community
Reinvestment Act.
All
this goes to show that the companies were not sacrificing very much in their racial
justice commitments. Yet many of them have still dawdled in writing the checks.
For example, the Post notes that Chuck Robbins, the CEO of Cisco Systems,
tweeted in June 2020 that his company would be contributing $5 million to a
handful of groups such as Black Lives Matter. The newspaper found that Black
Lives Matter has not yet received any money.
It remains unclear whether Cisco and the other companies ever intend to make good on their pledges, even though they have already reaped the public relations benefits from the commitments.
Apart
from the matter of reliability is the question of whether it makes sense to
call on large corporations to help deal with matters such as systemic racism.
Typically, this is framed as a debate between those who see big business as a
potential force for positive change and those who argue that corporations
should focus solely on creating value for shareholders.
There are problems with both those positions. The notion that the business of business is solely to generate profits, long popularized by the rightwing economist Milton Friedman, is not only amoral but simplistic.
Corporations may
find it beneficial to spend money on things such as charitable contributions or
lobbying even if the immediate effect is to reduce profits a bit. Those
expenses may very well lead to higher profits in the longer term by generating
good will or changing public policy.
Some
corporations, in fact, may seek to project an image of social or environmental
responsibility as part of their brand—think Ben & Jerry’s, Patagonia, etc.
When they make contributions to progressive causes, they are really engaged in
nothing more than marketing.
Yet
perhaps the biggest misconception in most discussions of the role of
corporations is the assumption that big business is somehow part of the
antidote to social and environmental ills. The truth is often that companies
are a cause of those ills.
For
example, when it comes to systemic racism, large corporations are hardly
innocent bystanders. Many of them have decades-long track records of racial
discrimination in the treatment of both employees and customers.
Many of these cases are documented in Violation Tracker. The database contains more than 3,000 entries on employment discrimination (of all kinds) with total penalties of more than $4 billion. These include actions by agencies such as the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission as well as class action lawsuits.
Among the latter are
multi-million-dollar settlements paid by major companies such as Coca-Cola,
Federal Express, and Eastman Kodak.
Violation
Tracker also has more than 200 cases in which companies were
accused of bias in their dealings with customers—such as charging
African-American borrowers higher interest rates than their white counterparts.
These cases have resulted in more than $1 billion in fines and settlements.
Among the companies involved in these matters have been MetLife, JPMorgan
Chase, and Toyota.
All
of this is to say that many corporations have much work to do to eliminate
systemic racism under their own roof before being called on to help address the
problem at a national level. When it comes to social change, big business often
remains part of the problem rather than the solution.