Friday, June 07, 2019







Qatar Airways is joining the growing number of airlines demanding payback from Boeing for its 737 Max disasters — here's the full list



Trump in Fox News interview suggests Mexico isn't a US ally and accuses the country of killing thousands of Americans




NOT QUITE SOCIALISM BUT ON THE ROAD
AMELIORATING CAPITALISM CSR CPR 


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  • A team of researchers is calling for companies to be as transparent about what it's dubbed "corporate political responsibility" as they are about corporate social responsibility.
  • Covert lobbying for policies that contradict the ones espoused in "green" advertising and branding is getting harder to pull off, and companies can gain a competitive advantage through transparency that customers and shareholders are increasingly demanding.
  • This article is part of our ongoing series on Better Capitalism.
That's why Thomas P. Lyon of the University of Michigan and a research team that comprised the Bretesche Workshop on Systemic Change have called on companies to start being transparent about what they dubbed corporate political responsibility (CPR). If a company spends millions on green ad campaigns but tens of millions more lobbying politicians to pass laws that would protect business as usual, then the whole idea of corporate social responsibility (CSR) is undermined.
In an article that those researchers published in the California Management Review last year — cheekily titled "CSR needs CPR" — the authors wrote, "as demands for political transparency grow, it will become increasingly difficult for companies to execute a strategy that involves contradictions between virtuous public statements and self-serving lobbying and other political activities."

They reached three conclusions that they believe will not only benefit consumers, society, and the environment, but also the companies' long-term profits:

Nurses reveal 7 facts about hospitals a lot of people don't know, from why it's always so cold to how unclean they can be




Barnes & Noble is getting a new owner after years of declines: Elliott Management, the giant Paul Singer-run hedge fund

  • Elliott Management is acquiring Barnes & Noble for about $683 million including debt, the companies said Friday.
  • While the bookseller has lost half its market value in the last five years, its shares soared Thursday after The Wall Street Journal reported the deal was in the works.
  • Barnes & Noble would not mark Elliott's first bookstore deal. Elliott acquired Waterstones, the largest retail bookseller in the United Kingdom, one year ago. That chain's chief executive, James Daunt, will also assume the role of Barnes & Noble CEO once the deal is complete.
  • Once a $2.4 billion company by market capitalization around its peak in 2006, Barnes & Noble's market value has shrunk to just over $436 million. Its shares traded just under $6 apiece as of Thursday's close.

Strict US anti-abortion laws forced a woman to give birth to a baby without a skull






Airlines' polluting planes spark international backlash, spawning a growing movement of 'flight shaming' that could ultimately threaten their bottom lines

  • There's a growing number of people who avoid flying because of the massive pollution from airplanes.
  • Commercial flying accounts for about 2.5% of global carbon emissions today but without concrete steps, that number will rise as global air travel increases.
  • The airline industry has set out on a plan to cut emissions and achieve carbon neutral growth as the movement threatens its bottom line.
BRING BACK THE AIRSHIPS