Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY
/
Ethics, Enterprise, and the Multinational Corporation
Ethics, Enterprise, and the Multinational Corporation
Nov 15, 2024 7:48 AM

R&L: In your view, what are the primary ethical responsibilities of a business professional in a free society?

Raymond: The main professional responsibility of a person in business is business. He or she must be successful in economic terms, but always within an ethical framework. Whether his or her constituency is a corporation and its shareholders or the customers in a small and privately held business, his or her first responsibility is to serve that constituency. But I also feel strongly that when a person is successful in an economic way, he or she thereby gains the tools to do many more things. That means supporting the broad activities of the corporation, including the people who work for pany and munities in which it operates. It is important to remember that all business has an impact on the lives of real people. In order to gain the tools to fully address the broad impact of business on society, economic success is indispensable. It makes no sense to talk of the social obligations of the corporation without reference to its economic obligations. The two are intertwined.

R&L: Do you think that a case can be made for the moral potential of a free economy?

Raymond: Absolutely. A free economy is as essential to society as democratic political institutions. A strong market-based economy is the fertile ground for democratic freedoms that we think are important. The freedoms that people have that flow from all civic institutions e from the success of a market system. I read a quotation from Woodrow Wilson that makes this point: “You can’t have a free society without having the free enterprise system.”

R&L: What do you see as the primary moral and practical challenges that face people in a free economy now and in the future?

Raymond: In every aspect of life, including the economic dimension, we are always challenged to do the right thing. In many cases in the market system, which allows a great deal of latitude for human choice, people can get carried away to excess. We have seen that in this country in the last few years, particularly on Wall Street, with the rise of the old human frailty of greed. This occurs when people begin to serve only their own needs to the detriment of everyone else. To counter such trends, we must work to e not just players or owners but also stewards of the free market system. That means that we need to recognize the pitfalls e with it. To avoid those pitfalls means to treat fairly everyone with whom one has dealings, and we need to assure that in all matters of business that we are direct and clear.

R&L: Of course, plenty of people think that the capitalist system is inherently immoral. How do you respond to that?

Raymond: It is unfortunate that there are people who say that capitalism is inherently immoral. I do not view it that way at all. I think that capitalism, more than any other system, gives a person the capability, through economic growth and economic development, to provide more opportunity to people. There is no system that is inherently moral if the participants themselves are not. The market system requires that people mitted and willing to work hard. Inherent with that is what I call a merit system, which I think gives people the greatest opportunity. I do understand that there are some people who would want to place a higher value on abstract ideals like equality of position and wealth over practical ideals like freedom. What these people forget is that everyone in our human family has different skills and different talents. We should seek a system that provides outlets for those skills and talents so that everyone can find a way to work and serve in a manner that best suits the strengths of each individual. That is only going to happen under the freedom offered by the market system.

R&L: How petition? Competition is often seen as an antagonistic relationship and that is, perhaps, even socially destructive. How do you see this?

Raymond: Competition can be viewed in two ways. It can be viewed in a negative light and be seen as destructive, but one can also have the view that it petition that drives people and institutions to higher and higher levels of excellence and, therefore, to more and more opportunity. Again, I think that is a function of petition is managed by the participants. Competition can be both inspiring and exhilarating. petitive instinct is what I think drives organizations and people to e better and better. It can promote change toward progress and development, which is good for everybody. It can be the motivating force behind improvement in our social well-being that is far beyond anything we might have imagined on our own. When we think, for example, about technology, it is clear that petitive drive is what underpins development and economic growth in the world. petition, the spectacular development of technology that we have seen in the last one hundred years in this country would not have happened.

R&L: In an economic sense, do you think that ethical business practice or moral values always facilitates the best interests of pany?

Raymond: I cannot think of cases where that would not be true. Ethical conduct is something that es inherent in an organization over a long period of time. From a business point of view, however, one cannot get caught up in whatever the ethical fashion is of the day, so many of which are merely masking a political agenda. What we should seek is broader than that, a sense of obligation, promise keeping, fairness, and all those traits that we associate with individual ethical conduct. These apply to business too.

R&L: In your multinational operations, you deal with a variety of cultures and legal regimes that surely pose ethical challenges.

Raymond: Most certainly. In some of the countries where we operate, there is a tradition of corruption, in which the political elites work with business in the framework of unsavory relationships. We do not participate in that. People sometimes ask, “Well, how do you operate in these countries without being involved?” I answer that we have operated in these countries for years, and everybody there understands that we do not participate in corrupt activities. We are accepted on this basis. It takes resolve mitment over a very long period of time to establish these credentials and to have people in the organization understand the value of them.

R&L: What about your responsibilities as an ethical businessperson particularly in the energy industry? How does this differ from other industries?

Raymond: I view energy as the lifeblood of world economic activity. And as a result, the energy industry has a profile that is particularly acute. As a matter of fact, the energy industry is by far the largest industry in the world. Because everybody needs energy, there are mitments that we have to have, such as continuity of supply. People have to have it, and not having it creates havoc. We have seen this from time to time when there is interruption in the energy supply.

R&L: Some interest groups urge a total ban, or at least stringent restrictions on, the sale and use of fossil fuels. What is your response?

Raymond: I find it interesting that many of the people who want to restrict fossil fuels live in well-developed countries where abundant and affordable energy is readily available. There are very few people in developing countries who hold this opinion for the use of fossil fuels in their countries. Economic activity and economic growth are the lifeblood of human progress. It is the potential for economic growth that provides the basis for the development of countries, for bringing to people essential goods and services, such as water to drink and facilities for healthcare. These ultimately provide the ability for people to have education, without which there really is not much of a future. I have a great deal of difficulty with those who live in a hugely prosperous country telling people in the developing world that they should be deprived of a critical source of energy. It turns out that the development of fossil fuels not only provides economic growth for those areas where it is a natural resource but it also provides a basis for international or multinational prosperity. People who want to curb the use of fossil fuels need to understand that not everyone in the world has the luxury of inventing romanticized scenarios. Many people just need clean water and energy to fuel social and economic progress.

R&L: Paint for us a picture of what the world would be like if there were a ban on the sale, use, or development of fossil fuel.

Raymond: It would be devastating. That is not to say that, as time goes on, there may be a form of energy that none of us can imagine now. But if we want to be realistic and live with what we have today, banning fossil fuels would shut a country down. That may sound simplistic and draconian. But, in fact, if we did not have fossil fuels, it would be draconian. It is always hard for people to imagine that without fossil fuels there would be no effective mode of transportation, that there would be no way to heat everyone’s homes. There is hardly an activity that a person can think about that does not intrinsically involve energy, most of which is currently provided by fossil fuels.

R&L: What about the concern that pany has shown for the environment? There is a lot of junk science going around.

Raymond: If one looks at the environmental record of ExxonMobil, it is the best in our industry. All the way from transporting crude oil and products to how we operate our facilities. As one would expect, we are one of the big energy users, just by the processes that we have to employ to produce the products that people want. Over the years, we have continued to e more and more energy efficient. It is not only good for society, but it makes economic sense. In our worldwide operations, whether it is water or air or how we deal with all the other environmental issues, pany is responsive and is very sensitive to how we operate, recognizing, of course, that there are just some practical and scientific limitations as to what we can plish. Of particular note is that late last year mitted to invest $100 million in a groundbreaking research effort at Stanford University called the Global Climate and Energy Project. We believe this project holds great promise for yielding new technology that can help us continue to produce reliable and affordable energy while reducing greenhouse gas emissions in a cost-effective way. Our involvement in this project continues our long history of advancing technological innovations and supporting scientific research.

R&L: How do you respond to attacks by environmental extremists? What is the effect of these attacks on your corporation’s ability to provide a sustained source of inexpensive energy?

Raymond: We e under criticism, which is not often based in fact. People talk about how our tankers operate and then, when they look at the facts, they find out that we have the best tanker operation of any fleet in the world. Many critics of pany generally have an agenda, which is not necessarily related to pany, but is a somewhat broader agenda in terms of the use of fossil fuels, and probably gets back to a point that we raised earlier about petitive, free enterprise system. Economic enterprise is all about service. We obviously want to produce things that people want. We are going to continue to do that in an environmentally responsible way, while still being aware of the physical, scientific, and practical issues that we have to deal with.

R&L: As the Chief Executive Officer of one of the largest corporations in the world, what is your view of the “little man,” the employee at the introductory level of pany?

Raymond: I was one of those at one time. I went to work right out of school at Exxon’s pany in Tulsa, Oklahoma. It was an exciting place to be. One step at a time, I moved around in pany and ended up with experience in every aspect of the organization. Everybody in senior management at pany started as I started. They went to some college or university and went to work for one of panies somewhere around the world. Gradually, as they gained experience, they were given opportunities to do more and more things. It has been forty years since my career at ExxonMobil began, but I still recognize that the lifeblood of pany is bringing in new people. Their new skill sets and perspectives are going to make pany continue to be successful long after I am not here anymore. We take great pride in each and every one of our employees around the world.

R&L: Is ExxonMobil a pany? What programs and charities that ExxonMobil has supported are you particularly proud of?

Raymond: I was looking at some data the other day. In today’s dollars, in the last fifty years, we have donated about $3.5 billion to various organizations and causes around the world. The vast majority of our contributions have been devoted to education, much of which has supported activities directed toward science, engineering, and mathematics, starting at the elementary school level all the way through the university level. We were one of the founders of the United Negro College Fund and the National Action Council for Minorities in Engineering, and we have been involved in similar activities all over the world. We do this because we believe that education is really the vehicle to opportunity and growth. Through our philanthropy people have been given opportunity in education and have seen themselves grow. This helps underscore the quality of life that the free society can produce. Both economic success and philanthropic generosity is in all of our interests. We participate in areas where we can have a significant impact, because we owe that to our employees and to society. It is important to try and provide more opportunity for people. Ultimately, that is of value to all of us, not only in the narrow sense of growth for pany and industry, but also in terms of society’s knowledge of, mitment to, the free enterprise system.

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
RELIGION & LIBERTY
The higher calling of the dismal science
Economist and theologian Paul Heyne once asked the question, “Are economists basically immoral?” He asked this because economists have a frustrating tendency to interrupt the high moral aspirations of others plications about how, in the real world, life is not so simple. When other people are concerned with social justice and love, they have a knack for focusing on things like costs and logistics, seemingly putting a price on doing the right thing. Is this just an annoying habit...
How can I help with the final matching challenge of the 'Acton@25 Campaign?'
Currently celebrating our 25th year in operation, this fall we hope to announce pletion of our Acton@25 Campaign to launch our next 25 years! The capital campaign began in 2012 to support Acton’s physical expansion and programmatic growth. Since moving to our new workspace, we have been able to plan larger-than-ever conferences, produce two dvd video curricula and a documentary, and display our unique and rare collection of close to 15,000 books. Over 2,000 people have attended our in-house...
The burden of the Christian
Charles Malik is not a household name among educated Christians who stand for a free and virtuous society. Some may vaguely recall his name from his involvement in the formative period of the United Nations and the drafting of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights. But his name is often overshadowed either by more familiar personages, such as Eleanor Roosevelt, or by the way in which the Universal Declaration was used to justify a 1974 charter “to promote the...
The Cold War and the soul of Soviet hockey
Review of the 2014 documentary Red Army. This year marks the 35th anniversary of the “Miracle on Ice,” the stunning 4-3 victory of the United States men’s hockey team over the Soviet Union at the 1980 Winter Olympics in Lake Placid, New York. The new documentary Red Army provides the broader context of this seemingly singular event as it traces the career of one of the most decorated Russian players of all time: Viacheslav Fetisov. Fetisov was a young...
What to expect at our university
For an adequate formation of a culture, the involvement of the whole man is required, whereby he exercises his creativity, intelligence, and knowledge of the world and of people. Furthermore, he displays his capacity for self-control, personal sacrifice, solidarity and readiness to promote mon good. Thus the first and most important task is plished within man’s heart. – Pope John Paul II, Centesimus Annus In about a month, we will be enjoying Acton’s annual assemblage, Acton University. We chose...
Double-edged sword: The power of the Word - John 19:33-34
John 19:33-34 But when they came to Jesus and found that he was already dead, they did not break his legs. Instead, one of the soldiers pierced Jesus’ side with a spear, bringing a sudden flow of blood and water. One of the remarkable things about the risen and ascended Christ is that he still bears the marks of his death and suffering for humanity. Christ has truly made the Cross eternal with his physical body. Even when our...
From cuneiform to kindle: Scripture for a digital age - An interview with Bob Pritchett
In the early nineties, Bob Pritchett made the decision to leave his then employer, Microsoft, and enter the risky world of entrepreneurship. More than two decades later, it’s safe to say that this risk has paid off. pany he founded, Faithlife, now employs nearly 500 people and is on the forefront of digital publishing. Headquartered in Bellingham, Washington, Faithlife creates digital tools and resources for Bible study and publishes ebooks. While pany primarily creates content for the digital world,...
Editor’s note
The Houston-based Prison Entrepreneurship Program (PEP) treats convicted criminals as if they were “raw metal in the hands of a blacksmith— crude, formless, and totally moldable.” PEP puts prisoners through a rigorous character training and business skills regimen to prepare them for a productive, even flourishing, reentry to life after incarceration. Ray Nothstine took part in PEP’s “pitch day” presentations where prisoners present their start-up dreams before a panel of business people and investors. In the main feature of...
Nature, markets, and human creativity
A review of Free Market Environmentalism for the Next Generation by Terry L. Anderson and Donald R. Leal. (Palgrave Macmillan, January 2015). Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholomew in his statementfor the 2015 World Water Day makes a number of assertions that, while inspired by morally good ideals, are morally and practically problematic. Chief among them is his assertion “that environmental resources are God’s gift to the world” and so “cannot be either considered or exploited as private property.” While certainly not...
Isabel Paterson
In the Liberal Tradition Whoever is fortunate enough to be an American citizen came into the greatest inheritance man has ever enjoyed. He has had the benefit of every heroic and intellectual effort men have made for many thousands of years, realized at last. Journalist, philosopher, and literary critic Isabel Paterson may have faded into obscurity in the last few decades, but she is one of the greatest classical liberal thinkers of her time. She is lauded as one...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2024 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved