When your business school is communicating with outside constituents, does it focus only on profit and shareholder value as measures of business success and how your business school contributes to society? There are special forms of business organization that explicitly seek to serve multiple stakeholders. These include the benefit corporation, B Lab certified corporation, and the low-profit limited liability company (L3C). These are covered in this book. If a corporation does not have such an organization, and most don’t, how should its consideration of non-owner stakeholders differ from companies that do have such an explicit stated purpose? Assets held by institutional investors with a stated goal of voting their shares in a manner that supports environmental, social, and governance (ESG) investing, including climate change concerns, have grown rapidly in recent years. The amount of assets held by institutional investors that do not espouse ESG investing, also known as sustainable investing, are still considerably greater than assets held by institutional investors that do. This gap has been rapidly shrinking, however. Do shareholders care about anything other than the stock price? If not, why then have some shareholders long refused to purchase stock in companies that sell cigarettes, oil, and firearms? Should a company’s impact on climate change be considered when corporate decisions are made? If so, is this a matter of self-interest, or a desire to also consider the interests of stakeholders who are not shareholders of the firm? Whatever your views on these considerations, should a financial management textbook ignore ESG risks, climate change, and multiple stakeholder interests, or critically examine the different views of these hot-button topics? These questions are considered in this book.. .eText ISBN: 9781954156128
Financial Management: Principles and Practice, 9th Edition Ebook (monbook.shop)
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eText ISBN: 9781954156128
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