Management Practices & Organizational Behaviour (MPOB) : Submitted By
Management Practices & Organizational Behaviour (MPOB) : Submitted By
Management Practices & Organizational Behaviour (MPOB) : Submitted By
MANAGEMENT PRACTICES
&
ORGANIZATIONAL BEHAVIOUR
(MPOB)
TOPIC:-
CORPORATE SOCIAL RESPONSIBILITY AND ITS
RELEVENCE IN THE ORGANIZATION
SUBMITTED BY:-
REYAZ AHMAD
MBA 1St Sem.
ROLL- A10 SUBMITTED TO:-
Ms. DEEPALI SHARMA
LPU,LIM
CONTENTS:-
1.INTRODUCTION
2.ENVIRONMENT
3.WORKPLACE
4.DIVERSITY
5.COMMUNITY&SOCIETY
7.PATRIOTISM
11.RURAL DEVELOPMENT
14.OBJECTIVE
15.OVERVIEW
17.INDIAN SCENARIO
18.CONCLUSION
19.REFRENCE
3. Workplace:-
We focus on creating and maintaining a rewarding and
welcoming workplace for our people around the world. We
strive to attract and retain the most talented individuals,
encouraging and enabling them to succeed.
4. Diversity:-
The 2000 Census data has revealed that the ethnic make-up
of the U.S. is changing rapidly. Organizations need to adapt
their traditional structures and mind-sets, which prevent
companies from marketing products effectively to significant
segments within the market.
Latinos are now the largest minority in the U.S.making up 13
percent of the overall U.S.We foster an inclusive
environment that values the richness of our differences and
reflects the diverse world in which we work. By cultivating a
dynamic mix of people and ideas, we enrich our service
capabilities and the communities in which we operate.
5. Community and Society:-
We endeavor to be good citizens wherever we live and work.
7. Patriotism:-
An issue such as ‘patriotism’ is by definition subjective but
has risen in importance in the U.S.
following the September 11, 2001 terrorist attacks. A good
example of an issue that falls into this category is the trend
today of companies attempting to avoid paying corporation
tax, some even going to the lengths of incorporating off-shore
(particularly Bermuda), even though company headquarters
and the majority of workers are based in the U.S According
to a recent Harvard University study, U.S. companies avoided
paying tax on nearly $300 billion income in 1998. In 1940,
companies and individuals each paid about half the federal
income tax collected; now the companies pay 13.7% and
individuals 86.3%.10.
15.Overview:-
Corporate social responsibility is necessarily an evolving
term that does not have a standard definition or a fully
recognized set of specific criteria. With the understanding
that businesses play a key role on job and wealth creation in
society, CSR is generally understood to be the way a
company achieves a balance or integration of economic,
environmental ,and social imperatives while at the same time
addressing shareholder and stakeholder expectations. CSR is
generally accepted as applying to firms wherever they
operate in the domestic and global economy.
The way businesses engage/involve the shareholders,
employees, customers, suppliers, governments, non-
governmental organizations, international organizations, and
other stakeholders is usually a key feature of the concept.
While business compliance with laws and regulations on
social, environmental and economic objectives set the official
level of CSR performance, CSR is often understood as
involving the private sector commitments and activities that
extend beyond this foundation of compliance with laws.
From a progressive business perspective, CSR usually
involves focusing on new opportunities as a way to respond
to interrelated economic, societal and environmental demands
in the marketplace. Many firms believe that this focus
provides a clear competitive advantage and stimulates
corporate innovation.
CSR is generally seen as the business contribution to
sustainable development which has been defined as
"development that meets the needs of the present without
compromising the ability of future generations to meet their
own needs", and is generally understood as focusing on how
to achieve the integration of economic, environmental, and
social imperatives. CSR also overlaps and often is
synonymous with many features of other related concepts
such as corporate sustainability, corporate accountability,
corporate responsibility, corporate citizenship, corporate
stewardship, etc..
CSR commitments and activities typically address aspects of
a firm's behaviour (including its policies and practices) with
respect to such key elements as; health and safety,
environmental protection, human rights, human resource
management practices, corporate governance, community
development, and consumer protection, labour protection,
supplier relations, business ethics, and stakeholder rights.
Corporations are motivated to involve stakeholders in their
decision-making and to address societal challenges because
today's stakeholders are increasingly aware of the importance
and impact of corporate decisions upon society and the
environment. The stakeholders can reward or punish
corporations. Corporations can be motivated to change their
corporate behaviour in response to the business case which a
CSR approach potentially promises. This includes:
1. Stronger financial performance and profitability (e.g.
through eco-efficiency),
2. Improved accountability to and assessments from the
investment community,
3. Enhanced employee commitment,
4. Decreased vulnerability through stronger relationships with
communities, and
5. improved reputation and branding.
18. Conclusion:-
After study of this topic I can gave conclusion that the
corporate social responsibility has gained prominence from
all avenues. Organizations must realize that government
alone will not be able to get success in its endeavor to uplift
the down trodden of society. The present societal marketing
concept of companies is constantly evolving and has given
rise to a new concept-Corporate Social Responsibility. Many
of the leading corporations across the world had realized the
importance of being associated with socially relevant causes
as a means of promoting their brands. It stems from the desire
to do good and get self satisfaction in return as well as
societal obligation of business.
The Indian corporate sector spent US$ 6.31 billion on social
expenditure during 2007-08, up from US$ 3.68 billion spent
during the previous fiscal. The Steel Authority of India Ltd
(SAIL), the country's largest steel company, spent US$ 21.05
million on CSR last year; Tata Steel Ltd, (which runs a 850-
bed hospital and rural projects in 800 villages around
Jamshedpur), spends about US$ 31.58 million as part of its
annual revenue expenditure. Now there are plans to also
introduce CSR in the small and medium enterprises (SME)
sector to increase its reach in remote areas. IF WE keep on
felling trees without planting them, the area that was once a
forest, will become a desert. Many parts of Delhi have
already started experiencing shortage of water. The reason for
this, is the increase in the average density of population, the
ground water table going down, and green belts being
replaced by concrete structures resulting in decreased average
annual rainfall and decline in the recharging of ground water.
Further, report submitted to Supreme Court by the
Environment Prevention and Control Authority (EPCA)
states that Delhi’s roads are already being choked by the
vehicles. Lutyens Delhi, less than 100 years after
construction, has already featured in the list of 100 most
endangered sites in the world. Thus, the question to be
addressed is when it comes to development, what does
‘sustainable’ mean?
The term Sustainable Development (SD) was used for the
first time, at the United Nations Conference on the Human
Environment in Stockholm in 1972. However, a working
definition of SD was coined in 1987 with the publication of
‘Our Common Future’, popularly known as the Brundtland
Report of the World Commission on Environment and
Development. The Commission’s definition, since widely
adopted, was: “Development as the means to satisfy the
needs of present generations without compromising the
resources of future generations”. Sustainability, the
Commission argued, includes not only economic and social
development, but also a commitment to the needs of the poor
and recognizing the physical limitations of the earth.
The World Business Council for sustainable development
states, “Corporates’ social responsibility is the continuing
commitment by business to behave ethically and contribute to
economic development while improving the quality of life of
the workforce and their families as well as of the local
community and society at large.” Thus, Corporate Social
Responsibility (CSR) or ‘sustainability’ is not just obeying
the law. It is not philanthropy. It is much beyond that. It
implies serious business where organisations have to be seen
as partners in their communities and not just as profit centres,
promoting the interest of their shareholders but as businesses
having obligation towards various stakeholders.
Who are these stakeholders and what are their roles? In this
context, any individual or group that can influence or is
influenced by an organisation’s conduct is a stakeholder. Let
us understand this, with a couple of examples that bring out
the business and reputation risks and underline the
importance of conducting business responsibly:
19. References:-
1. Corporate Social Responsibility in India - An Empirical
Research
- By Bernadette Dsilva
2.responsibility orientation and directorial type, Journal of
Business Ethics, 4; pp 393-102.