Monday, 10 August 2009

The Question of Continuing the Enterprise

If a publicly owned business is consistently unsuccessful, should the stockholders move to dispose of it?

Does the answer depend mainly
  • on business judgement,
  • on ethics or
  • on custom?

We think that what usually happens in such cases is dictated mainly by custom - by the stockholders' habit of letting things drift until something happens to change the picture.

The ethical question turns on the possible obligation of the owners toward society, the employees, or the management, which may require them to continue to operate the business even though it is unprofitable. This matter has not been thought through.

Economists say that the elimination of unprofitable enterprises is an important means by which the free-enterprise system adapts its output flexibly and efficiently to the public's wants. However, while society as a whole may lose rather than gain by the continuance of unprofitable businesses, the impact of discontinuance on local communities may be disastrous and cannot be ignored.

With respect to employees, no ethical obligation seems to interfere with drastic layoffs and discharges when demand declines. Whether a concern is successful or unsuccessful, the NUMBER of employees retained on the payroll is expected to be a matter of sound business judgement, and not of ethics.

The increasing power of labour unions has tended to impose uniform wage requirements on all companies in an industry, with the result that the less favourably situated units have no flexibility of contract and therefore little chance of working out a decent return for the owners. If ethical considerations are to dictate the continuance of such enterprises, it would seem that there should be some give-and-take between stockholders and employees.

Ref: Security Analysis by Graham and Dodd

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