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IT'S POWER, NOT PROFITABILITY
by Peter Moss,
Profit is not one concept, but two. It is accepted because
few people understand that corporate profit is quite different
from sole proprietorship profit. Everybody understands sole proprietorship
profit: it is the difference between price and cost. When a papa-mama
grocery sells a quart of milk for $1.89 and pays the dairy $1.59,
the profit is 30 cents. Of course, there are some pennies for
rent, electric and mortgage, but most of that 30 cents is wages
for papa and mama who staff the store dawn to dusk, often 7 days
a week. If they would not earn wages, they would go bankrupt
and starve.
Corporations also make a profit, but because of a dirty accounting
trick, corporations are allowed to deduct all of their costs
(raw materials, payroll, utilities, depreciation, taxes, etc.)
before calculating their profit. Since payroll is already deducted,
corporate profits are not wages but return on investment. The
difference is not only quantitative where sole (papa-mama) ownerships
earn thousands of dollars while corporations earn millions and
billions, but qualitative: sole ownership profits are necessary
wages while corporate profits
are
return on investment when times are good and companies are well
managed. This is the most important single lesson I learned in
three years of graduate school of business administration. The
Internal Revenue Service understands this and taxes sole ownerships
as individuals, while corporations pay a much lower tax and only
on the small "profit" after all expenses. Unfortunately
most voters never attend graduate school of business administration
and do not understand the fundamental difference between corporate
profit and papa-mama profit. As a result, most voters readily
accept the necessity for profit and readily confuse sole ownerships
profits and corporate profits. This explains why most people
consider business, big and small, as a natural or even optimal
format for economic activity.
And then there is a whole additional level of voter incomprehension.
Studies published on top executive behavior show that CEOs are
far more interested in power than profit, and power depends on
size, not profit. Even the FORTUNE 500 (and similar) lists of
the largest corporations are in decreasing order of sales, not
profit. The lame "reason" for this is that sales are
relatively steady year-to-year while profits fluctuate more.
But more importantly, CEOs are more keen on sales than on profits
because the CEOs are power hungry and size is far more important
in wielding [often corrupt] power than profitability. But why
are corporate speakers and their publications always harping
on profit, never on power? Because the voters (and the untutored
business reporters) have no power and cannot relate to power
but can relate to profit, especially the papa-mama kind. To claim
that profit is a valid goal is a fraud built upon a fraud: blurring
wages with corporate profit is the first fraud, and blurring
hunger for power with hunger for profit is the second fraud.
It is easy to show that power, not profit, motivates CEOs but
it can't be done by interviewing CEOs who are not motivated to
divulge the truth even when they know it. We have to refer to
their documented actions.
We have been indoctrinated to believe that corporate managements
do everything for profit but that is just not true. They are
more interested in "having their way" and nobody will
tell corporate management what to do and what not to do. Pitiful,
simple, childish obstinacy. Look at the General Motors notices
of stockholder meetings for decades (I have been following them
meticulously since 1964). Each year there are half a dozen or
so stockholder proposals, but no matter how obviously desirable,
they always carry a negative management recommendation and the
proxies are cast to uphold the management position no matter
how unprofitable, unjust, or just plain ridiculous the "management
position" may be. GM's secret motto: Our way or No way.
The problem with this ossified view is that corporate employees
mistake corporate policy as divine command and when they have
to interact with corporation victims in courts of law or other
real life situations, they become babbling idiots. The situation
is maintained by compartmentalization: management makes all the
decisions, employees carry them out unthinkingly, and any problems
that management and staff can't handle go to the law department
where some devious but rarely
smart lawyer does what he can to win the day or at least bury it in
a confidential settlement while that legalized injustice lasts.
To put corporate obstinacy and power hunger in perspective, consider
the Iraq weapons of mass destruction flap. In a secret meeting
between vice president Cheney and the CEOs of the fossil fuellers,
it was agreed to "change the regime" because ExxonMobil,
ChevronTexaco, ConocoPhillips and company want to tell Saddam
how to price and schedule his oil. They have had it with Saddam
telling the fossil fuellers. But of course, don't tell the voters
it's blood for oil, they won't go for it. Scare the pants off
the UN and mankind by saying that Saddam is "working on"
weapons of mass destruction. But underneath it all, it's not
mainly about blood for oil or even blood for oil profits. It's
mainly about who will tell whom or else. The main danger is not
even the loss of innocent lives but the danger that once Iraq's
128 billion barrel proven reserves are "liberated,"
they will be converted to global warming which will melt the
polar ice caps and permanently flood New York, Miami, L.A., San
Fran, Tokyo, Sydney, Melbourne, and all coastal megalopolises.
We must stop global warming and fossil fuellers.
And not to forget the tax accounting double standard. If elected,
I will propose legislation so every individual will pay taxes
only on income left after food, shelter, health care, commuting,
clothing, and other necessities to live and generate taxable
income. Why should non-corporate citizens be second class citizens?
A better world is possible and it can be legislated if the people
vote for it.
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