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Ethical business: is it really that ethical?

Thomas J | 28.08.2002 23:34

A critique of so-called 'ethical business' and 'ethical capitalism' using the most famous of 'ethical' compaines, The Body Shop, as an example.

Ethical companies claim to care about the environment and show responsibility for their actions. The most famous of these ethical companies is the Body Shop, founded in 1976 by Anita Roddick. It claims to promote ethical trade and business through initiatives such as Trade Not Aid and Community Trade. But do they practice what they claim?

In 1994 the journalist Jon Entine investigated the Body Shop, and produced the article "Shattered Image: Is the Body Shop Too Good To Be True?", which was published in the journal Business Ethics. One of the allegations it made is that some Body Shop products contain non-renewable petrochemicals, including toxic formaldehyde (1,2). The Body Shop's claim to be against animal testing has also come under fire. The McSpotlight website, in it's "beyond McDonald's" section, highlights how the Body Shop only bans ingredients if they have been tested for less than five years, and how ingredients that have been tested for reasons other than cosmetics are accepted anyway (3).
The Body Shop's "Trade Not Aid" scheme, which claimed to aid developing countries, only accounts for a small amount of products made for the Body Shop, less than 1% of total turnover (2,3,4). The Body Shop claimed that harvesting brazil nut oil has enabled Kayapo Indians to use the rainforest sustainably, protecting it from damage by mining and logging compainies. But only a small number of the Kayapo are involved, creating conflict within the community (2,3). The McSpotlight accuses the Body Shop of being like every other multinational corporation by "fuelling consumption at the Earth's expense", and its main purpose is for "making lots of money for its rich shareholders" (3). The Body Shop also pays its workers at minimum wage, and does not allow unionisation of its workers (3), a policy not unlike that of McDonald's. Another way in which the Body Shop behaves in a manner similar to the McDonald's Corporation is by silencing their critics with the threat of lawsuits, a tactic know as "corporate censorship" (1,3,4).

The Body Shop may have started with the best of intentions, even though some have accused Anita Roddick of stealing the concept from a Californian company founded in 1970, which at the time was also called "The Body Shop" (2). However, in a capitalist system, one rule exists above all others: make more profit or die. This applies to the Body Shop just as much as it applies to McDonald's or Microsoft, and in the never ending quest for profit, even the greatest of principles will by compromised or ignored altogether.

References:

(1) http://www.jonentine.com/articles/business_brawl.htm
(2) http://www.brazzil.com/p19dec96.htm
(3) http://www.mcspotlight.org/beyond/companies/bodyshop.html
(4) http://flag.blackened.net/intanark/faq/secE7.html

Thomas J

Comments

Hide the following 6 comments

In agreement... but....

29.08.2002 09:25

I would agree that Body Shop's ethical business practices are questionable, but they are still the only high street retailer to offer any kind of alternative.

I shop there for most of my beauty products as I find that their products contain fewer of the nasty chemicals that I am allergic too.

However I no longer see them as as a fair trade/ethical business, just looking through the list of ingredients on the packaging will tell you that. But I do believe that a majority of consumers are fooled by their 'Green' image. The question is how do we go about re-educating the consumer and also tightening the laws on the advertising/marketing of goods.

Anita Roddick herself has asked (in a letter published in the Guardian) for businesses to be more upfont about the way that their goods are manufactured, so why cant she start with her own/former company.

I agree that a lot of new business are all too ready to jump on the green bandwagon in order to appeal to the new consumer climate (no pun intended), what we need is some kind of green watchdog or 'Which' to monitor the claims of some of these business people.

Hope


In agreement... but....

29.08.2002 09:25

I would agree that Body Shop's ethical business practices are questionable, but they are still the only high street retailer to offer any kind of alternative.

I shop there for most of my beauty products as I find that their products contain fewer of the nasty chemicals that I am allergic too.

However I no longer see them as as a fair trade/ethical business, just looking through the list of ingredients on the packaging will tell you that. But I do believe that a majority of consumers are fooled by their 'Green' image. The question is how do we go about re-educating the consumer and also tightening the laws on the advertising/marketing of goods.

Anita Roddick herself has asked (in a letter published in the Guardian) for businesses to be more upfont about the way that their goods are manufactured, so why cant she start with her own/former company.

I agree that a lot of new business are all too ready to jump on the green bandwagon in order to appeal to the new consumer climate (no pun intended), what we need is some kind of green watchdog or 'Which' to monitor the claims of some of these business people.

Hope


not sure, but

29.08.2002 11:08

did anita not sell the bodyshop recently?

UN


Re: UN

29.08.2002 15:40

Anita Roddick has indeed stepped down as chariman of the Body shop, and the Roddicks involvement in the Body Shop is much less than it used to be.

 http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/business/1815591.stm

You can't really blame her for doing so though, she herself admits that the Body Shop has lost its political edge when it was floated on the stock market:

 http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/business/1508352.stm

Thomas J


PLCs have to behave this way..

29.08.2002 17:40

When companies float on the stock market in the UK, the directors have a legal obligation to maximise the return to shareholders. So it's unsurprising that when the Body Shop went public it "lost it's edge". At present, directors could be sued for taking an ethical stance which reduced profit!

tr


Business Is Rotten To The Core

01.11.2003 11:26

I suspect that The Body Shop, like all modern businesses, has hit the real barrier to ethical trade - which is that it's almost impossible to achieve. Companies cannot exist in a bubble. To do business you need backers, partners, suppliers, employees and customers. It would be very difficult to run any kind of venture without getting your hands dirty to some degree - even if it is "second-hand dirt". So many businesses are so rotten to the core - at best amoral and often tangibly immoral - that its hard to isolate yourself from the badness that's seeped into the pours of every head office in the world. To us it has become "normal". We don't see the effect we're having because we don't want to see, and so we can buy our fashionable trainers made by sweatshop workers in Asia and still sleep at night. We can invest our money in banks who are quietly bleeding the poorest nations to death and not give it a second thought. We can vote in leaders who kill thousands of innocent women and children just to protect our oil interests and then complain only when our taxes go up or our pensions go down.

Decades of relentless persuasion through the mass media and popular culture has taught us that it's okay to be greedy and amoral when there's money to be made and livelihoods to protect. When we go to work we're expected to check our morality in at the door. Anita Roddick spent so many years swimming against the tide that I think she must have just gotten too tired, and The Body Shop ended up floating downstream with all the others. We mostly just accept it - and woebetide anyone who questions it. Arguably, a truly ethical person is effectively unemployable, and a truly ethical business is equally disadvantaged. Let's face it - if Jesus were alive today he'd be on the dole.

Jason Gorman
- Homepage: http://www.objectmonkey.com