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Article
Marxism, Business Ethics, and Corporate Social Responsibility
Journal of Business Ethics (2009)
  • William H. Shaw, San Jose State University
Abstract

Originally delivered at a conference of Marxist philosophers in China, this article examines some links, and some tensions, between business ethics and the traditional concerns of Marxism. After discussing the emergence of business ethics as an academic discipline, it explores and attempts to answer two Marxist objections that might be brought against the enterprise of business ethics. The first is that business ethics is impossible because capitalism itself tends to produce greedy, overreaching, and unethical business behavior. The second is that business ethics is irrelevant because focusing on the moral or immoral conduct of individual firms or businesspeople distracts one’s attention from the systemic vices of capitalism. I argue, to the contrary, that, far from being impossible, business requires and indeed presupposes ethics and that for those who share Marx’s hope for a better society, nothing could be more relevant than engaging the debate over corporate social responsibility. In line with this, the article concludes by sketching some considerations favoring corporations’ adopting a broader view of their social and moral responsibilities, one that encompasses more than the pursuit of profit.

Chinese translations appear in Social Science Research, serial no. 175 (March 2008), and New China Digest, vol. 12, serial no. 408 (June 2008).

Keywords
  • marxism,
  • business ethics,
  • corporate social responsibility
Publication Date
February, 2009
Publisher Statement
SJSU users: use the following link to login and access the article via SJSU databases
Citation Information
William H. Shaw. "Marxism, Business Ethics, and Corporate Social Responsibility" Journal of Business Ethics Vol. 84 Iss. 4 (2009)
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/william_shaw/9/