Competitive Markets, Corporate Firms, and New Governance: An Ordonomic Conceptualization
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Halle-Wittenberg: Martin-Luther-Universität Halle-Wittenberg, 2009. (Diskussionspapiere; Vol. 2009, No. 13).
Research output: Working paper › Working papers
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TY - UNPB
T1 - Competitive Markets, Corporate Firms, and New Governance
T2 - An Ordonomic Conceptualization
AU - Pies, Ingo
AU - Beckmann, Markus
AU - Hielscher, Stefan
PY - 2009
Y1 - 2009
N2 - The purpose of this article is to develop an ordonomic conceptualization of corporate citizenship and new governance that (a) provides a framework for positively explaining the political participation of companies in new governance processes and (b) does not weaken but instead strengthens the functional role of corporations as economic actors in the market system of value creation. To this end, we develop our ordonomic approach in a critical discussion of Milton Friedman’s stance on the social responsibility of business in three steps. (1) The ordonomic perspective on the economics ethics of competitive markets argues that the social responsibility of business does not lie in maximizing profits but in addressing societal needs through the mutually advantageous creation of value. (2) The ordonomic approach to the business ethics of corporate actors claims that corporate firms can use moral commitments as a factor of production. (3) The ordonomic perspective on the process ethics of new governance holds that companies can act not only as economic actors but also participate as political and moral actors by taking ordo-responsibility in processes of new governance. This role of corporate citizens in the new governance does not weaken but, instead, strengthens the role of business firms as economic agents for value creation.
AB - The purpose of this article is to develop an ordonomic conceptualization of corporate citizenship and new governance that (a) provides a framework for positively explaining the political participation of companies in new governance processes and (b) does not weaken but instead strengthens the functional role of corporations as economic actors in the market system of value creation. To this end, we develop our ordonomic approach in a critical discussion of Milton Friedman’s stance on the social responsibility of business in three steps. (1) The ordonomic perspective on the economics ethics of competitive markets argues that the social responsibility of business does not lie in maximizing profits but in addressing societal needs through the mutually advantageous creation of value. (2) The ordonomic approach to the business ethics of corporate actors claims that corporate firms can use moral commitments as a factor of production. (3) The ordonomic perspective on the process ethics of new governance holds that companies can act not only as economic actors but also participate as political and moral actors by taking ordo-responsibility in processes of new governance. This role of corporate citizens in the new governance does not weaken but, instead, strengthens the role of business firms as economic agents for value creation.
KW - Sustainability sciences, Management & Economics
KW - New Governance
KW - Corporate Citizenship
KW - Value Creation
KW - Economic Ethics
KW - Business Ethics
KW - Process Ethics
KW - Ordonomics
KW - Stakeholder Theory
KW - Sustainability
KW - Aristotle
KW - Milton Friedman
KW - Corporate Social Responsibility
KW - New Governance
KW - Corporate Citizenship
KW - Wertschöpfung
KW - Wirtschaftsethik
KW - Unternehmensethik
KW - Prozessethik
KW - Ordonomik
KW - Stakeholder-Theorie
KW - Nachhaltigkeit
KW - Aristoteles
KW - Milton Friedman
KW - Corporate Social Responsibility
M3 - Working papers
SN - 978-3-86829-194-0
T3 - Diskussionspapiere
BT - Competitive Markets, Corporate Firms, and New Governance
PB - Martin-Luther-Universität Halle-Wittenberg
CY - Halle-Wittenberg
ER -