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Moral Agency, Profits and the Firm: Economic Revisions to the Friedman Theorem

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journal contribution
posted on 2007-07-17, 11:17 authored by Sigmund Wagner-Tsukamoto
The paper reconstructs in economic terms Friedman’s theorem that the only social responsibility of firms is to increase their profits while staying within legal and ethical rules. A model of three levels of moral conduct is attributed to the firm: (1) self-interested engagement in the market process itself, which reflects according to classical and neoclassical economics an ethical ideal; (2) the obeying of the “rules of the game,” largely legal ones; and (3) the creation of ethical capital, which allows moral conduct to enter the market process beyond the rules of the game. Points (1) and (2) position the Friedman theorem in economic terms while point (3) develops an economic revision of the theorem, which was not seen by Friedman. Implications are spelled out for an instrumental stakeholder theory of the firm.

History

Citation

Journal of Business Ethics, 2007, 70 (2), pp. 209-220

Version

  • AM (Accepted Manuscript)

Published in

Journal of Business Ethics

Publisher

Springer

issn

0167-4544

eissn

1573-0697

Copyright date

2006

Available date

2007-07-17

Language

en

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