Wednesday, March 11, 2020

Corporations Are Not "Blood-sucking", "Corrupt" "Criminals" -- They're Not Even People Are They?


It bothers me no end to hear Bernie Sanders, Elizabeth Warren, Tom Steyer, AOC and other Democrats castigating corporations as "blood-suckers", "criminals", "corrupt", and "greedy". These are the same people who rail against the legal fiction that corporations are persons yet they attack corporations as if persons -- personal misbehavior, personal crime, personal sins.  Amoral? Sure, corporations are amoral because corporations are not persons, neither moral nor immoral; neither ethical nor unethical.  Corporate ethics is an oxymoron.

In my adulthood (some of my friends challenge that), I have worked for four employers: three large corporations and myself. The corporations -- General Mills, Marriott, and Westin Hotels -- were and are not criminals, not bloodsuckers, not corrupt. They are enterprises that unabashedly pursue self-interest as they define it, taking advantage of every law and loophole they can.  They protect their self-interest with lobbying and lawyering.  But that does not make them criminal; they are, in a sense, law-abiding. 

Yes, they were/are often misguided in their definition of interest and priorities, their values and goals sometimes warped by the personal interests of management vis-a-vis customers, employees, community, and shareholders.  It is not corporations but the rules under which they play on which we need to focus.  Change the rules and you will change their behavior.  

To reform corporate behavior and our economy, focus on six subjects and set up the rules and regulations to achieve our goals:

1. Clarify Corporations’ Rights and Responsibilities
Strategy: deny to corporations the rights of "personhood." This is especially important in First Amendment matters. Corporate officers, in person, as individuals, enjoy all the rights specified in the Bill of Rights.  But corporations have long outgrown the pattern of the 17thC when English Common Law protected them, most of which were not-for-profit churches and colleges, and granted them, as if private persons, the protection of privacy from government takings.  From that grew the illogical extension to all private persons' rights to all corporations -- for-profit or whatever. Congress needs to spell out what corporations are in the eyes of law, what accountabilities we demand and what protections we accord them. (Not a Constitutional Convention, that would be dangerously open-ended; do it by Act of Congress.) Citizens United cannot be overturned until the status of corporations is defined by Congress.

2. Broaden Charters and Constituent Representation
Strategy: give voice to multiple constituents and build representation of them into corporate mission and governance structure. At least four constituents are common to every corporation: customers, owners, non-executive employees and community.  A corporate mission statement should reflect accountability to these four and to whatever other is appropriate to the company.  At least one representative of these four constituent groups belong on the Board and on the Corporate Executive Committee.  In the case of "owner", distinction should be made between investor persons and impersonal funds driven by algorithms; investor persons are what is needed for input to corporate directors and officers.  An Act of Congress should mandate such structure in every State Corporate Charter under the Commerce Clause of the Constitution? 

3. Constrain Political Influence
Strategy: make political lobbying costly.  To explain corporate interests to lawmakers is important, but today when lobbyists overwhelm lawmakers in sheer numbers and have better access to lawmakers in capitals than do constituents, some constraints need to be imposed. Suggestion: remove lobbying from deductible business expenses, making the expense of offices and lobbyists, whether employee or contractor or consultant, a non-deductible, after-tax expense taken out of retained earnings and earnings per share. 

4. Deter Concentration and Congregate Mergers
Strategy: renew and invigorate anti-trust enforcement. Anti-trust enforcement has been lax since the Ford Administration.  A meme has taken hold: so long as consumer prices are lowered, or not raised, competitors can merge with or acquire competitors no matter how large the resultant corporation becomes. Few players in a game are an oligopoly.  I was at General Mills when the FTC attempted to find the cereal industry an oligopoly not in the public interest. I and many of my associates thought they were right: pricing in concert did not need illegal collusion.  One or another of the big three, Kellogg, GMI, and Post, could announce a price increase confident, from history and experience, that the others would follow. In industry after industry, the number of players is reduced and the cost of entry for new competitors increased. Conglomeration yields leverage on distributors and suppliers. Witness Disney allowed to acquire Marvel, Pixar, The Muppets, 20th Century Fox and others. In social media, witness Facebook's acquisition of Instagram, What's App and 50 others. In the airline industry, a boiling down through gobbling up competitors to five national competitors. 
A second meme is that congregate mergers, i.e., horizontal mergers into a new industry, are OK because they do not increase market share in a given market.  The idea is that size alone is not a problem. Wrong: with size comes barriers to entry, concentration of systems and research that provides each division an advantage in its industry, leverage that can change an industry in ways that harm the economy even while bringing lower prices.  Witness how Amazon and Walmart have brought benefits of price and accessibility while creating problems in labor, environmental impacts, and community values.  Behemoths need to be examined on multiple metrics, not just on efficiency.   

5. Deny Tax Havens 
Strategy: collect tax revenues where a corporation truly makes its profits.  Corporations take full advantage of the opportunities to lower their taxes -- as they should. But false realities are created. Is Carnival really a Panamanian company when its physical headquarters are in Florida; its officers and owners US Citizens who work and live in the US, its board of Directors dominated by US Citizens, whose administrative employees are Americans, and whose customers of their various cruise lines are predominately Americans? Why do we tolerate Carnival paying its corporate taxes to Panama instead of to the US?  Transfer pricing is another way to create a false reality.  Transfer a component at cost to a subsidiary operating in a low-tax country, like Luxembourg or Ireland, which then adds a large margin, books the profit and pays the tax there rather than here.  Transfer prices rightfully should include value added by labor and capital at its source with a profit margin included. How best to mandate this? Congressional action re accounting rules and IRS regulation is required.  

6. Break Up Hoards of Cash
Strategy: make dividends deductible and tax recipients at ordinary income rates. Cash is useful only when in motion. During WWII, the US imposed "excess profits" taxes on corporations to get them to share war profits with shareholders and labor.  Today, trillions are locked away in corporate treasuries. A structural change is needed to unlock those treasuries and get that money moving -- as dividends, wage and hourly raises, investments in new businesses and so on. Hand-in-hand with anti-trust constraints on mergers and acquisitions, corporations could be encouraged to take on risk of  researching and investing in new ideas and opportunities.  Sitting on cash helps neither owners nor employees, and dulls creativity.  A hoard of cash reflects a scarcity of imagination. How to encourage movement of that money?  Make dividends a deductible business outlay just as is employee compensation, thus reducing a corporation's taxable income. Dividends are in a sense double-taxed, first as part of taxable corporate profits, from which they are paid; second, as income of their recipients. Stop the first by considering dividends a deductible business expense and continue to tax recipients of dividends as if earned income.  Even more radical might be mandating a ceiling on cash as a percent of capital assets.  (Earnings on capital and earnings on one's labor ought to be taxed alike, but that's a different story than reforming our corporations.) 


I have now amply demonstrated that I am neither lawyer nor accountant. But I do know corporations and how they adapt to their environments.  Change the laws, tax rules, and regulations that describe the playing field and you will create responsible corporations overnight.


Monday, March 9, 2020

Jay Inslee: our Honorable and Admirable Snake of a Governor


"I told [Vice President Mike Pence] not to be complimentary of that governor because that governor is a snake . . .. So Mike may be happy with him, but I’m not, OK?”: The Dishonorable He-Who-Shall-Not-Be-Named, President of the United States, 6th of March, 2020.

Why the President’s animus?  Not just because Governor Inslee, who would make a damn sight better President than the current incumbent, had a polite but forthright meeting with Vice President Pence last week in which Inslee expressed frustration over lack of testing kits and self-protective gear for nurses and first responders, but also because the President does not forget or forgiveFebruary 26th, 2018: ". . . we need a little less tweeting and a little more listening. . .", The Honorable Jay Inslee, Governor of Washington, in an Oval Office colloquy with the President over Trump's proposal to arm and train a quarter of our school teachers to pack heat.

We Washingtonians should be delighted that Inslee is so doubly honored — to be on the President’s I Hate You! I Hate You! List, somewhat akin to Nixon’s Enemies List, and to be likened to the snake; with the exception of the Hebrew Bible/Old Testament Book of Genesis, most cultures throughout history, throughout the world, have endowed snakes with symbolic virtues.  The following, for example, from Wikipedia:  
·         “The behavior of snakes and their facial features (e.g. the unblinking, lidless eyes) seemed to imply that they were intelligent, that they lived by reason and not instinct.
·         “In northern Europe and West Asia, snakes were associated with healing and transformation, and in some cultures snakes were fertility symbols.
·         “In other cultures, snakes symbolized the umbilical cord, joining all humans to Mother Earth.
·         “The Great Goddess often had snakes as her familiars—sometimes twining around her sacred staff, as in ancient Crete—and they were worshiped as guardians of her mysteries of birth and regeneration.
·         “Some cultures regarded snakes as immortal because they appeared to be reincarnated from themselves when they sloughed their skins. Both circles and spirals were seen as symbols of eternity
·         “Snakes were associated with wisdom in many mythologies, perhaps due to the appearance of pondering their actions as they prepare to strike, which was copied by shamans in the build-up to prophecy in parts of West Africa.
·         “Usually the wisdom of snakes was regarded as ancient and beneficial towards humans . . ..
·         “In East Asia snake-dragons watched over good harvests, rain, fertility and the cycle of the seasons,
·         whilst in ancient Greece and India, snakes were considered to be lucky and snake-amulets were used as talismans against evil."

Of course, in the context of Inslee dealing with disease and public health, the healing snakes on the Caduceus is the revered symbol of physicians throughout the world.  

Perhaps the most famous snake of all, revered by millions, is Naga, the seven-headed cobra who protected The Buddha from mud and water by coiling and providing him a seat above the muck.

Jay Inslee: other states would be lucky to have such a snake as Governor.