The Global Challenge
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Big business has become disconnected
from the broader society within which it
operates. A narrow focus on short-term
returns has prevented businesses from
investing in innovation to foster long-term
sustainable growth.
The common understanding of the purpose
of publicly listed companies, particularly in
Anglo-American markets, is that they exist to
maximize shareholder value. Publicly listed
companies are under tremendous pressure
from activist shareholders, takeover threats,
and general market dynamics to generate
short-term value by spinning off parts of the
company, buying back shares, and laying off
staff. External pressure is compounded by
executive compensation schemes that are
heavily weighted towards stock options. In
theory, incentive compensation systems should
reduce agency costs so that managers will act
in the interests of shareholders. In practice,
they create perverse incentives to extract
value from the company at the expense of
customers, employees, organizational health,
the community in which the business operates,
and ultimately society as a whole.
A number of unintended consequences result,
including:
•	 The failure of companies to adequately 	
	 consider and respond to societal challenges,	
	 such as environmental damage and climate 	
	 change, due to the perceived cost;
•	 Erosion of trust between society and 	
	 the corporate sector, including the role of 	
	 corporations in shaping public policy, which 	
	 in turn leads to a loss of trust in democratic
	 processes; and
•	 Firm mismanagement through stock
	 manipulation, insider trading and tax
	 evasion, with a number of associated
	 firm-level and macroeconomic risks
	 including treating employees as
	 disposable; undermining investment,
	 research and development; hollowing out
	 whole organisations; turning executives
	 into caricatures of self-interest and greed
	 powered by narrowly focused remuneration
	 schemes; focusing talent in the corporate
	 world on systematically extracting
	 value rather than creating it; stock price
	 manipulation; and fueling market failure
	 and economic crash.
Inequality has greatly increased in the last
twenty years, in part due to the failure to
translate corporate profits into increased
salaries across the firm. Even as worker
productivity has continued to rise, real worker
wages have essentially flat-lined. At the same
time, executive compensation has markedly
increased due to the afore-mentioned stock
option schemes. Rising inequality within
companies has in turn contributed to macro-
level inequality that threatens to concentrate
economic and political power in the hands of
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Disconnected Business
Big business has become
disconnected from the
broader society within which
it operates. A narrow focus
on short-term returns has
prevented businesses from
investing in innovation to
foster long-term sustainable
growth.
1
Paige Morrow - Head of Brussels Operations, Frank Bold
The Future of the Company
Options and Possibilities
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a privileged few.
The biggest questions we face go to the
very core of business: what is the purpose of
the corporation, and specifically of the large
listed company with dispersed shareholders?
Will the current model of large publicly listed
companies survive the next decade, and if
not, what will it be replaced by?
Another question is about the alternatives
to public companies, such as B-corporations,
co-operatives, companies controlled by
foundations, privately held companies,
partnerships and family-owned businesses.
Many of these alternatives have shown
themselves to be capable substitutes for
corporate bodies, but will they pick up
momentum and drive the way forward?
Will they eventually eclipse publicly listed
companies? Research by the CFA Institute
shows that global equity listings have
declined by 17% between 1998 and the end
of 2012, from 56,119 to 46,674. US stock
exchanges were hardest hit, losing nearly
50% of their listings from their high of 9,253
in 1997. Europe has also seen a significant
decline of 23% of its listed companies, while
Asian exchanges have seen the least change
with less than 5% lost. Given the sharp
decline in number and longevity of public
companies, it is unsurprising that many ask
if a model of public limited company will
survive the next decade.
Perhaps the most pressing issue today for
financial regulators is the question of how
to address short-termism in the markets and
its significant influence on the strategies of
public companies. It is widely acknowledged
that an excessive focus on quarterly returns
fed into the 2008 crisis but opinions vary
widely on the causes of and solutions to
short-termism. What is the role of financial
markets and investors in promoting
responsible capitalism? Can we turn
institutional investors into patient capital,
willing to invest in innovative research that
will yield returns in the long-term? And
conversely, is it possible to limit short-term
trading, or at least to reduce its impact on the
governance of companies?
Stewardship has become a central focus
of regulators seeking to push markets to
a long-term orientation. What do good
stewardship and responsible investment
look like in practice? Is it reasonable to
expect institutional investors and corporate
managers to serve as good stewards and act
sustainability?
2
Listing Companies
The biggest questions we
face go to the very core
of business: what is the
purpose of the corporation,
and specifically of the
large listed company with
dispersed shareholders? Will
the current model of large
publicly listed companies
survive the next decade,
and if not, what will it be
replaced by?
Taking a Longer View
Perhaps the most pressing
issue today for financial
regulators is the question
of how to address short-
termism in the markets and
its significant influence
on the strategies of public
companies.
Part of the Problem
The effects of our failure to
make capitalism inclusive
will become apparent: we
have a generation of young
people with uncertain
prospects and we face rising
inequality with a rising
share going to the wealthy
even as our wages stagnate.
The corporation will be
increasingly associated with
these problems due to its
status as the place where
much of the distribution of
the benefits of capitalism
take place.
There is little that is guaranteed but change
is certain. In the words of Lawrence Bloom,
the co-founder of B.e Energy (a triple bottom
line energy company), we are no longer in
an age of change but in a change of age.
The world faces three converging crises –
economic, environmental and social – that
require urgent and visionary action. Behind
these crises are the failure of a worldview
based on the single-minded pursuit of
growth and the failure to work collaboratively
to ensure that benefits are shared widely.
In the next decade, we will certainly see
the effects of our failure to proactively
address challenges such as inequality, the
regulation of financial markets and youth
unemployment. The effects of our failure
to make capitalism inclusive will become
apparent: we have a generation of young
people with uncertain prospects and we face
rising inequality with a rising share going to
the wealthy even as our wages stagnate. The
corporation will be increasingly associated
with these problems due to its status as the
place where much of the distribution of the
benefits of capitalism take place.
We have already started to see the effects
of climate change and business has started
to sit up and take notice. How will we react
and will we be able to turn the ship around?
The answer to this question largely depends
on the readiness of the corporate sector to
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Proposed Way Forward
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3
support progressive political solutions. It
is becoming patently clear that exhausting
the planet’s resources is not an option – a
growing number of politicians and business
leaders recognize we cannot burn our fossil
fuel reserves without destroying the world as
we know it.
Not all is grim; in the next decade we
will witness the continued rise of a new
generation of leaders pushing for responsible
business, broader recognition of the need for
gender and racial diversity in boardrooms
and C-suites, and the shift of power from
the global north to south and from west to
east. Companies from emerging economies
will certainly take on a key role in the global
economy. They will bring with them different
models of governance which might be more
able to respond to changing conditions,
although they will also introduce new
challenges. Finally, the line between public
and private will continue to blur. There will
be mounting pressure from civil society
and the general public for sustainability
in business and for corporations to take
responsibility for the impacts generated by
their value chains and off-shore operations.
The reordering of transnational legal
and political frameworks will offer us the
opportunity to revision the respective roles
of the State, the corporation and civil society.
Concerted effort is needed to nudge the
process in the direction of democracy and
broad-based participation.
On our current path, another crash of the
financial markets is highly likely. We have not
addressed the root causes of the 2008 crisis
and momentum for a significant overhaul of
the markets has slowed to a crawl. Will the
erosion of trust in business caused by the
cyclical boom-and-bust nature of markets
have an impact on policy-making? It’s hard
to say.
The relative power of stakeholders
within companies is similarly uncertain:
will employees regain their voice? Will
responsible investors play a more important
role in influencing companies?
There are several events that could occur at
the world stage that would have a profound
impact on the global economy: another
global energy crisis, the eclipse of Western
economies by emerging economies, and the
dissolution of the European Union.
The overarching uncertainties are whether
we will see a rebalancing of power between
different stakeholders, whether big business
and key interested parties will lead or
resist a rebalancing of influence, and how
big a crisis is needed to jar us from our
current trajectory. The risk is that entrenched
interests that benefit from the current state
of play will thwart reforms that threaten to
limit their influence.
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The backlash against big corporations has
already fostered interest in alternative
business models that will continue to gain
momentum over the next decade. There is
not one perfect alternative to publicly listed
companies but rather a plurality of legal
structures that each have certain benefits
and drawbacks, including privately held
companies, partnerships, benefit corporations,
cooperatives, and worker-owned enterprises.
Major changes are on the way for company
boards. Although problematic, the concept
of stewardship has become the go-to
response for regulators seeking to address
short-termism in the markets, along with
increasing shareholder rights. In theory,
strengthening ‘shareholder democracy’
by giving shareholders additional powers
such as a say-on-pay seems like a good
way to encourage institutional investors
like pensions and sovereign funds to steer
companies in the right direction. In practice,
however, it is unclear whether we can expect
investors to take on this responsibility.
Responsible Business
The line between public
and private will continue to
blur. There will be mounting
pressure from civil society
and the general public for
sustainability in business
and for corporations to
take responsibility for the
impacts generated by their
value chains and off-shore
operations.
4
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Board Diversity
It may be that other
stakeholders besides
shareholders will take on
an increasingly important
role. Board level employee
representation is well
established in much of
continental Europe and has
started to receive some
attention at the EU level.
Board diversity is also a key
topic now and will almost
certainly be into the future.
We may see reserved seats
for women, visible minorities,
and other traditionally under-
represented groups.
Integrated Reporting
Integrated Reporting was
devised less than a decade
ago but has been picked up
by an increasing number of
companies who welcome
the ability to tell a story
about the whole picture of
the company, which is often
overlooked in quarterly
reports.
Thoughtful Policymaking
Thoughtful policymaking is
needed; indeed, perhaps the
best we can do is to try to
‘nudge’ behaviour in the right
direction and closely monitor
the results, ever ready to
react to changes.
A slight variation on this would be to
assign different powers to different classes
of shares.
It may be that other stakeholders besides
shareholders will take on an increasingly
important role. Board level employee
representation is well established in much
of continental Europe and has started to
receive some attention at the EU level.
Board diversity is also a key topic now and
will almost certainly be into the future. We
may see reserved seats for women, visible
minorities, and other traditionally under-
represented groups.
The classic maxim says that what is
measured is what matters. The traditional
focus of firms on measuring and reporting
on almost exclusively financial indicators
is changing to look at a broader set of
indicators. In the EU, the recently adopted
Non-Financial Reporting Directive requires
certain large European companies to
disclose information about environmental
matters, social and employee-related
matters, respect for human rights, anti-
corruption and bribery matters. Integrated
Reporting (<IR>) was devised less than
a decade ago but has been picked up by
an increasing number of companies who
welcome the ability to tell a story about
the whole picture of the company, which
is often overlooked in quarterly reports.
Closely related is the question of how to
share information about companies to
potential investors and the public. There
are several ideas out there for developing
benchmarks and labeling standards to
identify sustainable companies and financial
products, similar to what has been done for
Fair Trade products.
There are two main ways to influence
behaviour: sticks and carrots. Ideally, we will
push companies to be pro-social through a
combination of both regulatory policy and
economic incentives. For example, there has
been a lot of discussion in the context of
climate change about introducing taxation
of externalities, e.g. carbon taxes, as well as
a carbon market. The EU has also considered
proposals to impose a transaction tax on
financial markets to reduce volatility and
generate revenue, which has been used in
other jurisdictions with inconclusive results.
We may see requirements imposed to devote
a certain percentage of revenue to CSR, as is
being implemented in parts of Asia.
The Benefit Corporation and similar models
might be supported by governments, either
by tax incentives or by preferential treatment
in public procurement. Farsighted States
may reform their company law to introduce
mandatory elements of corporate purpose,
such as, for example, the concept of making
decisions with an aim to remaining within
our planetary boundaries, and adjusting
directors’ duties and responsibilities
accordingly. These changes have the
potential to have high impact because they
could shift economic activity to a new model
– and for that reason, they are unlikely to
be implemented. Other debated regulatory
reforms include caps on executive pay and/
or pegging executive pay to non-financial
returns; changing the rules on the legal
liability of multinational enterprises to allow
parent companies to be held legally liable
for the actions of their foreign subsidiaries;
and restrictions on firms’ right to buy
back their shares. Each of these reforms is
potentially important but it is only when
they are taken together that they have a
chance to lead to system-wide changes to
business conduct.
In terms of incentives, almost any of the
regulatory reforms discussed in the previous
paragraph could be framed instead as an
incentive with a bit of ingenuity. Additional
ideas include introducing incentives for
boards to change their composition or to
balance the short-term financial interests
of the company with long-term and/or non-
financial interests. Thoughtful policymaking
is needed; indeed, perhaps the best we can
do is to try to ‘nudge’ behaviour in the right
direction and closely monitor the results,
ever ready to react to changes.
Impact and Implications
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5
Tailored solutions will be needed to respond
to the unique characteristics of each region.
For example, the continental European,
Chinese, Japanese and Anglo-American
economics and business models are each
very different. Germany is characterized by a
small number (less than 700) publicly listed
companies with worker representation on
company boards, whereas mandatory board-
level employee representation would be a
controversial proposition in the UK or the
US. The EU will be forced to confront and
reconcile these types of discrepancies in the
corporate governance models of its Member
States as it asserts an increasingly active role
in company law, which has traditionally been
under the purview of national governments.
Outside of the EU, we need to bring Asia, the
Middle East and Africa into the discussion
of sustainability, workers’ rights and human
rights more generally. This will require
thoughtful balancing of the local context
with international standards. In the context
of human rights, the UN Guiding Principles
on Business and Human Rights outline the
responsibilities of States to enforce the
principles of international human rights law
and of companies to respect those principles.
But more work is needed to translate the
framework into context- and industry-specific
guidelines. It is in the implementation of
general principles and the reconciliation
of potentially contradictory rights that
compromises will be most needed.
If this process is successful, we may see a
gradual reduction in inequality leading to
less social unrest and less partisan politics.
We may also see an increasingly prominent
role for business in developing both soft
and hard law in a transparent way, acting
individually and in concert through more
progressive collaborative initiatives than
the current trade and industry associations
that dominate policy circles in Brussels,
Washington and London.
We need a new vision for the role of business
in society. Part of the reason why the focus
on maximizing shareholder value and
short-term profits has captured business
for so long is due to the failure to create
consensus around an alternative conception
of the purpose of the corporation. A model of
corporate governance narrowly focused on
maximizing shareholder value in the short-
term is unbalanced and self-destructive.
The paradigm that will rise to replace the
current one will need to have a more holistic
understanding of profit as one indicator of
the long-term health of the organization,
amongst others. The profit-making motive
will sit comfortably alongside a consideration
of a broader responsibility to the interests
of society.
This new paradigm must be translated into
the existing framework of incentives and
regulations for corporate governance and
accountability. It needs to be reflected in
market mechanisms, in particular in the way
that financial markets interact and influence
companies. The role of shareholders in
corporate governance will have to be
rethought in order to protect their role in
ensuring management accountability, whilst
freeing companies from the imperative to
maximise the stock price as at all costs.
In order to achieve transparency and
accountability, companies will need to
provide an accurate accounting of their
environmental and social impacts, through
required disclosure and through increased
pressure for meaningful information from
consumers. Boards of directors will also need
to revise their decision-making process to
consider the effect of the company on the
environment and society. Companies should
be expected, encouraged and even required
to develop long-term plans charting their
way towards environmental and economic
sustainability. It will be necessary to devise
holistic measures for measuring corporate
success in the long-term, reflecting their
ability to create value in a responsible
manner. These metrics should be reflected in
incentives for corporate executives as well
as for institutional investors. We need to
consider whether the current level of public
investment in research and development is
sufficient and properly allocated to achieve
transformative change. Public-private
partnerships, while not without flaws, are one
path to support and stimulate green growth.
At some point, we will be forced to
Measuring Success
It will be necessary to
devise holistic measures for
measuring corporate success
in the long-term, reflecting
their ability to create value in
a responsible manner. These
metrics should be reflected
in incentives for corporate
executives as well as for
institutional investors.
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6
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Acknowledging the Problem
At some point, we will be
forced to acknowledge
that the current approach
to governing companies is
broken. Perhaps after the next
financial crisis, but hopefully
sooner. Certainly as we are
forced to respond to climate
change, which cannot be
addressed by governments
alone without the support
and investment of business.
acknowledge that the current approach to
governing companies is broken. Perhaps after
the next financial crisis, but hopefully sooner.
Certainly as we are forced to respond to
climate change, which cannot be addressed
by governments alone without the support
and investment of business.
Head of Brussels Operations, Frank Bold
Lead expert on the Future of the Company.
Paige is the Head of Brussels Operations
for the public interest law firm Frank Bold
and is responsible for policy and public
affairs in the areas of corporate governance,
company law, and business and human rights.
Previously she was a researcher at the Centre
for the Study of Human Rights at the London
School of Economics and Political Science
examining the international regulation of
investment and investment arbitration.
Lead Expert – Paige Morrow
About Future Agenda
7
In an increasingly interconnected, complex
and uncertain world, many organisations
are looking for a better understanding
of how the future may unfold. To do this
successfully, many companies, institutions
and governments are working to improve
their use of strategic foresight in order to
anticipate emerging issues and prepare for
new opportunities.
Experience shows that change often occurs
at the intersection of different disciplines,
industries or challenges. This means that
views of the future that focus on one sector
alone have limited relevance in today’s world.
In order to have real value, foresight needs
to bring together multiple informed and
credible views of emerging change to form
a coherent picture of the world ahead. The
Future Agenda programme aims to do this
by providing a global platform for collective
thought and innovation discussions.
Get Involved
To discuss the future agenda programme and
potential participation please contact:
Dr.Tim Jones
Programme Director
Future Agenda
84 Brook Street, London. W1K 5EH
+44 203 0088 141 +44 780 1755 054
tim.jones@futureagenda.org
@futureagenda
The Future Agenda is the world’s largest open
foresight initiative. It was created in 2009 to
bring together views on the future from many
leading organizations. Building on expert
perspectives that addressed everything from
the future of health to the future of money,
over 1500 organizations debated the big
issues and emerging challenges for the next
decade. Sponsored globally by Vodafone
Group, this groundbreaking programme
looked out ten years to the world in 2020
and connected CEOs and mayors with
academics and students across 25 countries.
Additional online interaction connected over
50,000 people from more than 145 countries
who added their views to the mix. All output
from these discussions was shared via the
futureagenda.org website.
The success of the first Future Agenda
Programme stimulated several organizations
to ask that it should be repeated. Therefore
this second programme is running
throughout 2015 looking at key changes
in the world by 2025. Following a similar
approach to the first project, Future Agenda
2.0 builds on the initial success and adds
extra features, such as providing more
workshops in more countries to gain an
even wider input and enable regional
differences to be explored. There is also
a specific focus on the next generation
including collaborating with educational
organizations to engage future leaders. There
is a more refined use of social networks
to share insights and earlier link-ups with
global media organizations to ensure wider
engagement on the pivotal topics. In addition,
rather than having a single global sponsor,
this time multiple hosts are owning specific
topics wither globally or in their regions of
interest. Run as a not for profit project, Future
Agenda 2.0 is a major collaboration involving
many leading, forward-thinking organisations
around the world.
Context – Why Foresight?
Future Agenda 1.0 Future Agenda 2.0
What do you think? Join In | Add your views into the mix www.futureagenda.org

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Future of the company An initial perspective - Paige Morrow - Frank Bold

  • 1. The Global Challenge Aging Cities Commerce Connectivity Data Education Energy Food Government Loyalty Privacy Resources Transport Travel Water Wealth Work Health Learning Aging Cities Commerce Connectivity Data Education Energy Food Government Loyalty Privacy Resources Transport Travel Water Wealth Work Health Learning Big business has become disconnected from the broader society within which it operates. A narrow focus on short-term returns has prevented businesses from investing in innovation to foster long-term sustainable growth. The common understanding of the purpose of publicly listed companies, particularly in Anglo-American markets, is that they exist to maximize shareholder value. Publicly listed companies are under tremendous pressure from activist shareholders, takeover threats, and general market dynamics to generate short-term value by spinning off parts of the company, buying back shares, and laying off staff. External pressure is compounded by executive compensation schemes that are heavily weighted towards stock options. In theory, incentive compensation systems should reduce agency costs so that managers will act in the interests of shareholders. In practice, they create perverse incentives to extract value from the company at the expense of customers, employees, organizational health, the community in which the business operates, and ultimately society as a whole. A number of unintended consequences result, including: • The failure of companies to adequately consider and respond to societal challenges, such as environmental damage and climate change, due to the perceived cost; • Erosion of trust between society and the corporate sector, including the role of corporations in shaping public policy, which in turn leads to a loss of trust in democratic processes; and • Firm mismanagement through stock manipulation, insider trading and tax evasion, with a number of associated firm-level and macroeconomic risks including treating employees as disposable; undermining investment, research and development; hollowing out whole organisations; turning executives into caricatures of self-interest and greed powered by narrowly focused remuneration schemes; focusing talent in the corporate world on systematically extracting value rather than creating it; stock price manipulation; and fueling market failure and economic crash. Inequality has greatly increased in the last twenty years, in part due to the failure to translate corporate profits into increased salaries across the firm. Even as worker productivity has continued to rise, real worker wages have essentially flat-lined. At the same time, executive compensation has markedly increased due to the afore-mentioned stock option schemes. Rising inequality within companies has in turn contributed to macro- level inequality that threatens to concentrate economic and political power in the hands of futureagenda.org What do you think? Join In | Add your views into the mix Disconnected Business Big business has become disconnected from the broader society within which it operates. A narrow focus on short-term returns has prevented businesses from investing in innovation to foster long-term sustainable growth. 1 Paige Morrow - Head of Brussels Operations, Frank Bold The Future of the Company
  • 2. Options and Possibilities Aging Cities Commerce Connectivity Data Education Energy Food Government Loyalty Privacy Resources Transport Travel Water Wealth Work Health Learning a privileged few. The biggest questions we face go to the very core of business: what is the purpose of the corporation, and specifically of the large listed company with dispersed shareholders? Will the current model of large publicly listed companies survive the next decade, and if not, what will it be replaced by? Another question is about the alternatives to public companies, such as B-corporations, co-operatives, companies controlled by foundations, privately held companies, partnerships and family-owned businesses. Many of these alternatives have shown themselves to be capable substitutes for corporate bodies, but will they pick up momentum and drive the way forward? Will they eventually eclipse publicly listed companies? Research by the CFA Institute shows that global equity listings have declined by 17% between 1998 and the end of 2012, from 56,119 to 46,674. US stock exchanges were hardest hit, losing nearly 50% of their listings from their high of 9,253 in 1997. Europe has also seen a significant decline of 23% of its listed companies, while Asian exchanges have seen the least change with less than 5% lost. Given the sharp decline in number and longevity of public companies, it is unsurprising that many ask if a model of public limited company will survive the next decade. Perhaps the most pressing issue today for financial regulators is the question of how to address short-termism in the markets and its significant influence on the strategies of public companies. It is widely acknowledged that an excessive focus on quarterly returns fed into the 2008 crisis but opinions vary widely on the causes of and solutions to short-termism. What is the role of financial markets and investors in promoting responsible capitalism? Can we turn institutional investors into patient capital, willing to invest in innovative research that will yield returns in the long-term? And conversely, is it possible to limit short-term trading, or at least to reduce its impact on the governance of companies? Stewardship has become a central focus of regulators seeking to push markets to a long-term orientation. What do good stewardship and responsible investment look like in practice? Is it reasonable to expect institutional investors and corporate managers to serve as good stewards and act sustainability? 2 Listing Companies The biggest questions we face go to the very core of business: what is the purpose of the corporation, and specifically of the large listed company with dispersed shareholders? Will the current model of large publicly listed companies survive the next decade, and if not, what will it be replaced by? Taking a Longer View Perhaps the most pressing issue today for financial regulators is the question of how to address short- termism in the markets and its significant influence on the strategies of public companies. Part of the Problem The effects of our failure to make capitalism inclusive will become apparent: we have a generation of young people with uncertain prospects and we face rising inequality with a rising share going to the wealthy even as our wages stagnate. The corporation will be increasingly associated with these problems due to its status as the place where much of the distribution of the benefits of capitalism take place. There is little that is guaranteed but change is certain. In the words of Lawrence Bloom, the co-founder of B.e Energy (a triple bottom line energy company), we are no longer in an age of change but in a change of age. The world faces three converging crises – economic, environmental and social – that require urgent and visionary action. Behind these crises are the failure of a worldview based on the single-minded pursuit of growth and the failure to work collaboratively to ensure that benefits are shared widely. In the next decade, we will certainly see the effects of our failure to proactively address challenges such as inequality, the regulation of financial markets and youth unemployment. The effects of our failure to make capitalism inclusive will become apparent: we have a generation of young people with uncertain prospects and we face rising inequality with a rising share going to the wealthy even as our wages stagnate. The corporation will be increasingly associated with these problems due to its status as the place where much of the distribution of the benefits of capitalism take place. We have already started to see the effects of climate change and business has started to sit up and take notice. How will we react and will we be able to turn the ship around? The answer to this question largely depends on the readiness of the corporate sector to What do you think? Join In | Add your views into the mix
  • 3. Proposed Way Forward Aging Cities Commerce Connectivity Data Education Energy Food Government Loyalty Privacy Resources Transport Travel Water Wealth Work Health Learning 3 support progressive political solutions. It is becoming patently clear that exhausting the planet’s resources is not an option – a growing number of politicians and business leaders recognize we cannot burn our fossil fuel reserves without destroying the world as we know it. Not all is grim; in the next decade we will witness the continued rise of a new generation of leaders pushing for responsible business, broader recognition of the need for gender and racial diversity in boardrooms and C-suites, and the shift of power from the global north to south and from west to east. Companies from emerging economies will certainly take on a key role in the global economy. They will bring with them different models of governance which might be more able to respond to changing conditions, although they will also introduce new challenges. Finally, the line between public and private will continue to blur. There will be mounting pressure from civil society and the general public for sustainability in business and for corporations to take responsibility for the impacts generated by their value chains and off-shore operations. The reordering of transnational legal and political frameworks will offer us the opportunity to revision the respective roles of the State, the corporation and civil society. Concerted effort is needed to nudge the process in the direction of democracy and broad-based participation. On our current path, another crash of the financial markets is highly likely. We have not addressed the root causes of the 2008 crisis and momentum for a significant overhaul of the markets has slowed to a crawl. Will the erosion of trust in business caused by the cyclical boom-and-bust nature of markets have an impact on policy-making? It’s hard to say. The relative power of stakeholders within companies is similarly uncertain: will employees regain their voice? Will responsible investors play a more important role in influencing companies? There are several events that could occur at the world stage that would have a profound impact on the global economy: another global energy crisis, the eclipse of Western economies by emerging economies, and the dissolution of the European Union. The overarching uncertainties are whether we will see a rebalancing of power between different stakeholders, whether big business and key interested parties will lead or resist a rebalancing of influence, and how big a crisis is needed to jar us from our current trajectory. The risk is that entrenched interests that benefit from the current state of play will thwart reforms that threaten to limit their influence. What do you think? Join In | Add your views into the mix The backlash against big corporations has already fostered interest in alternative business models that will continue to gain momentum over the next decade. There is not one perfect alternative to publicly listed companies but rather a plurality of legal structures that each have certain benefits and drawbacks, including privately held companies, partnerships, benefit corporations, cooperatives, and worker-owned enterprises. Major changes are on the way for company boards. Although problematic, the concept of stewardship has become the go-to response for regulators seeking to address short-termism in the markets, along with increasing shareholder rights. In theory, strengthening ‘shareholder democracy’ by giving shareholders additional powers such as a say-on-pay seems like a good way to encourage institutional investors like pensions and sovereign funds to steer companies in the right direction. In practice, however, it is unclear whether we can expect investors to take on this responsibility. Responsible Business The line between public and private will continue to blur. There will be mounting pressure from civil society and the general public for sustainability in business and for corporations to take responsibility for the impacts generated by their value chains and off-shore operations.
  • 4. 4 What do you think? Join In | Add your views into the mix Board Diversity It may be that other stakeholders besides shareholders will take on an increasingly important role. Board level employee representation is well established in much of continental Europe and has started to receive some attention at the EU level. Board diversity is also a key topic now and will almost certainly be into the future. We may see reserved seats for women, visible minorities, and other traditionally under- represented groups. Integrated Reporting Integrated Reporting was devised less than a decade ago but has been picked up by an increasing number of companies who welcome the ability to tell a story about the whole picture of the company, which is often overlooked in quarterly reports. Thoughtful Policymaking Thoughtful policymaking is needed; indeed, perhaps the best we can do is to try to ‘nudge’ behaviour in the right direction and closely monitor the results, ever ready to react to changes. A slight variation on this would be to assign different powers to different classes of shares. It may be that other stakeholders besides shareholders will take on an increasingly important role. Board level employee representation is well established in much of continental Europe and has started to receive some attention at the EU level. Board diversity is also a key topic now and will almost certainly be into the future. We may see reserved seats for women, visible minorities, and other traditionally under- represented groups. The classic maxim says that what is measured is what matters. The traditional focus of firms on measuring and reporting on almost exclusively financial indicators is changing to look at a broader set of indicators. In the EU, the recently adopted Non-Financial Reporting Directive requires certain large European companies to disclose information about environmental matters, social and employee-related matters, respect for human rights, anti- corruption and bribery matters. Integrated Reporting (<IR>) was devised less than a decade ago but has been picked up by an increasing number of companies who welcome the ability to tell a story about the whole picture of the company, which is often overlooked in quarterly reports. Closely related is the question of how to share information about companies to potential investors and the public. There are several ideas out there for developing benchmarks and labeling standards to identify sustainable companies and financial products, similar to what has been done for Fair Trade products. There are two main ways to influence behaviour: sticks and carrots. Ideally, we will push companies to be pro-social through a combination of both regulatory policy and economic incentives. For example, there has been a lot of discussion in the context of climate change about introducing taxation of externalities, e.g. carbon taxes, as well as a carbon market. The EU has also considered proposals to impose a transaction tax on financial markets to reduce volatility and generate revenue, which has been used in other jurisdictions with inconclusive results. We may see requirements imposed to devote a certain percentage of revenue to CSR, as is being implemented in parts of Asia. The Benefit Corporation and similar models might be supported by governments, either by tax incentives or by preferential treatment in public procurement. Farsighted States may reform their company law to introduce mandatory elements of corporate purpose, such as, for example, the concept of making decisions with an aim to remaining within our planetary boundaries, and adjusting directors’ duties and responsibilities accordingly. These changes have the potential to have high impact because they could shift economic activity to a new model – and for that reason, they are unlikely to be implemented. Other debated regulatory reforms include caps on executive pay and/ or pegging executive pay to non-financial returns; changing the rules on the legal liability of multinational enterprises to allow parent companies to be held legally liable for the actions of their foreign subsidiaries; and restrictions on firms’ right to buy back their shares. Each of these reforms is potentially important but it is only when they are taken together that they have a chance to lead to system-wide changes to business conduct. In terms of incentives, almost any of the regulatory reforms discussed in the previous paragraph could be framed instead as an incentive with a bit of ingenuity. Additional ideas include introducing incentives for boards to change their composition or to balance the short-term financial interests of the company with long-term and/or non- financial interests. Thoughtful policymaking is needed; indeed, perhaps the best we can do is to try to ‘nudge’ behaviour in the right direction and closely monitor the results, ever ready to react to changes.
  • 5. Impact and Implications Aging Cities Commerce Connectivity Data Education Energy Food Government Loyalty Privacy Resources Transport Travel Water Wealth Work Health Learning 5 Tailored solutions will be needed to respond to the unique characteristics of each region. For example, the continental European, Chinese, Japanese and Anglo-American economics and business models are each very different. Germany is characterized by a small number (less than 700) publicly listed companies with worker representation on company boards, whereas mandatory board- level employee representation would be a controversial proposition in the UK or the US. The EU will be forced to confront and reconcile these types of discrepancies in the corporate governance models of its Member States as it asserts an increasingly active role in company law, which has traditionally been under the purview of national governments. Outside of the EU, we need to bring Asia, the Middle East and Africa into the discussion of sustainability, workers’ rights and human rights more generally. This will require thoughtful balancing of the local context with international standards. In the context of human rights, the UN Guiding Principles on Business and Human Rights outline the responsibilities of States to enforce the principles of international human rights law and of companies to respect those principles. But more work is needed to translate the framework into context- and industry-specific guidelines. It is in the implementation of general principles and the reconciliation of potentially contradictory rights that compromises will be most needed. If this process is successful, we may see a gradual reduction in inequality leading to less social unrest and less partisan politics. We may also see an increasingly prominent role for business in developing both soft and hard law in a transparent way, acting individually and in concert through more progressive collaborative initiatives than the current trade and industry associations that dominate policy circles in Brussels, Washington and London. We need a new vision for the role of business in society. Part of the reason why the focus on maximizing shareholder value and short-term profits has captured business for so long is due to the failure to create consensus around an alternative conception of the purpose of the corporation. A model of corporate governance narrowly focused on maximizing shareholder value in the short- term is unbalanced and self-destructive. The paradigm that will rise to replace the current one will need to have a more holistic understanding of profit as one indicator of the long-term health of the organization, amongst others. The profit-making motive will sit comfortably alongside a consideration of a broader responsibility to the interests of society. This new paradigm must be translated into the existing framework of incentives and regulations for corporate governance and accountability. It needs to be reflected in market mechanisms, in particular in the way that financial markets interact and influence companies. The role of shareholders in corporate governance will have to be rethought in order to protect their role in ensuring management accountability, whilst freeing companies from the imperative to maximise the stock price as at all costs. In order to achieve transparency and accountability, companies will need to provide an accurate accounting of their environmental and social impacts, through required disclosure and through increased pressure for meaningful information from consumers. Boards of directors will also need to revise their decision-making process to consider the effect of the company on the environment and society. Companies should be expected, encouraged and even required to develop long-term plans charting their way towards environmental and economic sustainability. It will be necessary to devise holistic measures for measuring corporate success in the long-term, reflecting their ability to create value in a responsible manner. These metrics should be reflected in incentives for corporate executives as well as for institutional investors. We need to consider whether the current level of public investment in research and development is sufficient and properly allocated to achieve transformative change. Public-private partnerships, while not without flaws, are one path to support and stimulate green growth. At some point, we will be forced to Measuring Success It will be necessary to devise holistic measures for measuring corporate success in the long-term, reflecting their ability to create value in a responsible manner. These metrics should be reflected in incentives for corporate executives as well as for institutional investors. What do you think? Join In | Add your views into the mix
  • 6. 6 What do you think? Join In | Add your views into the mix Acknowledging the Problem At some point, we will be forced to acknowledge that the current approach to governing companies is broken. Perhaps after the next financial crisis, but hopefully sooner. Certainly as we are forced to respond to climate change, which cannot be addressed by governments alone without the support and investment of business. acknowledge that the current approach to governing companies is broken. Perhaps after the next financial crisis, but hopefully sooner. Certainly as we are forced to respond to climate change, which cannot be addressed by governments alone without the support and investment of business. Head of Brussels Operations, Frank Bold Lead expert on the Future of the Company. Paige is the Head of Brussels Operations for the public interest law firm Frank Bold and is responsible for policy and public affairs in the areas of corporate governance, company law, and business and human rights. Previously she was a researcher at the Centre for the Study of Human Rights at the London School of Economics and Political Science examining the international regulation of investment and investment arbitration. Lead Expert – Paige Morrow
  • 7. About Future Agenda 7 In an increasingly interconnected, complex and uncertain world, many organisations are looking for a better understanding of how the future may unfold. To do this successfully, many companies, institutions and governments are working to improve their use of strategic foresight in order to anticipate emerging issues and prepare for new opportunities. Experience shows that change often occurs at the intersection of different disciplines, industries or challenges. This means that views of the future that focus on one sector alone have limited relevance in today’s world. In order to have real value, foresight needs to bring together multiple informed and credible views of emerging change to form a coherent picture of the world ahead. The Future Agenda programme aims to do this by providing a global platform for collective thought and innovation discussions. Get Involved To discuss the future agenda programme and potential participation please contact: Dr.Tim Jones Programme Director Future Agenda 84 Brook Street, London. W1K 5EH +44 203 0088 141 +44 780 1755 054 tim.jones@futureagenda.org @futureagenda The Future Agenda is the world’s largest open foresight initiative. It was created in 2009 to bring together views on the future from many leading organizations. Building on expert perspectives that addressed everything from the future of health to the future of money, over 1500 organizations debated the big issues and emerging challenges for the next decade. Sponsored globally by Vodafone Group, this groundbreaking programme looked out ten years to the world in 2020 and connected CEOs and mayors with academics and students across 25 countries. Additional online interaction connected over 50,000 people from more than 145 countries who added their views to the mix. All output from these discussions was shared via the futureagenda.org website. The success of the first Future Agenda Programme stimulated several organizations to ask that it should be repeated. Therefore this second programme is running throughout 2015 looking at key changes in the world by 2025. Following a similar approach to the first project, Future Agenda 2.0 builds on the initial success and adds extra features, such as providing more workshops in more countries to gain an even wider input and enable regional differences to be explored. There is also a specific focus on the next generation including collaborating with educational organizations to engage future leaders. There is a more refined use of social networks to share insights and earlier link-ups with global media organizations to ensure wider engagement on the pivotal topics. In addition, rather than having a single global sponsor, this time multiple hosts are owning specific topics wither globally or in their regions of interest. Run as a not for profit project, Future Agenda 2.0 is a major collaboration involving many leading, forward-thinking organisations around the world. Context – Why Foresight? Future Agenda 1.0 Future Agenda 2.0 What do you think? Join In | Add your views into the mix www.futureagenda.org