THE CORPORATION [4/23] | Externalities

THE CORPORATION [4/23] | Externalities

Corporate Loyalty and Externalities

Understanding Corporate Loyalty

  • The concept of loyalty in corporations is questioned, suggesting that companies primarily owe loyalty to themselves for growth and profitability.
  • Corporations often externalize costs, making others bear the financial burden of their societal impacts, a phenomenon referred to as "externalities."

Defining Externalities

  • An externality occurs when a transaction between two parties affects a third party who has no involvement or consent in the transaction.
  • The existence of externalities presents significant challenges within economic transactions.

Corporate Responsibilities and Externalization

  • Businesses face constant pressure to minimize costs, leading them to shift responsibilities onto others.
  • Corporations may choose not to address certain issues (e.g., military protection for oil sources), opting instead for others to handle these problems.

Nature of Corporations as Externalizing Machines

  • The metaphor compares corporations to sharks, describing both as efficient machines designed for specific objectives without moral considerations.
Video description

Support our campaign http://thecorporation.com 4. What is an externality? Milton Friedman describes it as the effect of a transaction between two parties on a third party who is not involved in the transaction. A technical sounding term that basically means let somebody else deal with the problems the corporation creates. For a playlist of all 23 chapters in order: http://www.youtube.com/view_play_list?p=FA50FBC214A6CE87 Full Film HERE: https://youtu.be/6v8e7dUwq_Q