Businesses See Political Advocacy As a No-Win Situation
Companies who embrace political agendas to please some of their employees or customers risk alienating others.
Companies who embrace political agendas to please some of their employees or customers risk alienating others.
The former labor secretary ignores the avian flu epidemic that devastated the supply of egg-laying hens.
Join Reason on YouTube and Facebook on Thursday at 1 p.m. Eastern for a live discussion of "stakeholder capitalism" or Environmental, Social, and Governance (ESG) investing.
The Congressional Budget Office projects that future deficits will explode. But there's a way out.
A Princeton phsychologist suggests there is little evidence that corporate DEI programs do much to enhance diversity or inclusion.
Lawmakers are reportedly planning to undo legislation that would have revoked Disney's special tax and governance status.
An excerpt from The Next American Economy: Nation, State, and Markets in an Uncertain World.
Just as you don't attract bees with vinegar, you don't attract corporations by promising to tax them heavily.
Corporate law profs disagree on the merits of Twitter's lawsuit to force Elon Musk to follow through with his offer to buy the company.
The inconvenient truth behind all the COVID-19 relief fraud and waste is that these government programs never should have been designed as they were.
It incentivizes high-noise, low-cost signaling rather than actual cultural changes.
Several studies have found that the vast majority of costs incurred by increased corporate taxes are passed along to workers in the form of lower wages.
No matter how you slice it, no one person or policy is solely to blame for surging inflation.
Certain politicians would do well to learn that inflation is not caused by corporate "greed."
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For most of the past decade-plus, those complaining the loudest about corporate participation in politics have been Democrats.
They give an edge to big companies that have no problems accessing capital and whose executives are often well-connected with politicians.
Corporate welfare hurts the people who actually need help.
The plan would make a liar out of Biden on a level reminiscent of George H.W. Bush's betrayal of his "read my lips" tax pledge.
Corporations can afford robots. Their competitors often cannot.
It will be no better for taxpayers than oil cartels are for consumers.
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It's a working model for non-state governance in cyberspace that is vastly preferable to government control of social media.
If you're going to attack Mark Zuckerberg for cozying up to Xi Jinping, maybe you should try harder not to sound like a Chinese dictator.
Corporations get attacked for not paying taxes in a certain year, but they’re just spreading out their losses.
A Soho Forum debate about stakeholder value vs. shareholder value.
Ayn Rand Institute's Yaron Brook says yes, Whole Foods' John Mackey says no.
There’s no journalist more relentlessly iconoclastic than Greenwald, who won the 2014 Pulitzer Prize for his reporting on the Snowden revelations.
The Pulitzer Prize–winning journalist on Joe Biden, free speech, and leaving The Intercept for Substack.
The New York Times touches on an old intra-libertarian debate over corporate responsibility.
On missing the accessible fruits of giant corporate filmmaking
In woke corporate America, there's no statute of limitations on wrongthink.
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The Pacific Legal Foundation is arguing that a California law mandating corporate boards have a minimum number of women amounts to unconstitutional sex discrimination.
Defining a company with political branding is risky business.
And will the end result encourage companies to try to keep cybersecurity breaches secret?
The former hedge fund manager will likely face scrutiny over his massive wealth and previous business dealings.
Bill de Blasio: "We are supposed to break up big corporations when they're not serving our democracy."
Yesterday's Supreme Court ruling expanded when the government can keep business records secret. That's bad news for transparency
This guy wants to run the economy?
A love letter to getting good stuff cheaply
How big hotel chains became arms of the surveillance state.
No matter what California legislators or Elizabeth Warren think
California's new law requiring corporate boards to have a minimum number of women is both unconstitutional and likely to do more harm than good.
There are lots of reasons to be concerned about government snooping, but how should we feel when private companies do it?