Recently, there has been much confusion and misinformation about (1)
environmental, social, and governance (ESG) considerations, (2) the ways
in which companies, boards, asset managers, investment funds, and other
market participants can, do, and should factor such considerations into
their decision-making processes, and (3) the need for companies to
consider, balance, advance, and appropriately protect stakeholder
interests in order to create value, generate sustainable returns, and
guard against downside risks to value and corporate health. This cloud
of confusion stems, in part, from nascent efforts to politicize ESG.
Consider the Trump administration’s proposed rulemaking in the
Department of Labor that would have required fiduciaries of retirement
plans making investment decisions to focus solely on “pecuniary” factors
(and, in turn, would have burdened the ability of fiduciaries to
appropriately take ESG factors into account in selecting investments and
engaging in risk-return analyses). And consider the letter sent to
BlackRock last month by 19 Republican attorneys general, accusing the
asset manager of prioritizing its “climate agenda” over the interests of
pensioners’ investments. These developments unfortunately fail to
appreciate that ESG, properly understood, is merely a collection of
quite disparate risks that corporations face, from climate change to
human capital to diversity to relations among the board, management,
shareholders, and other stakeholders. We write to resituate the role of
ESG and stakeholder governance within the well-established legal
framework of corporate fiduciary duties.
Dating back to the 1932 law review exchange between Merrick Dodd and
Adolf Berle, there has been a long-running debate over whether the
purpose of the corporation is to maximize short-term profits for
shareholders or, instead, to operate in the interest of all of its
various stakeholders to promote the long-term value of the corporation.
For several decades, the predominant view among corporate leaders,
practitioners, academics, investors, and asset managers was that the
role of the corporation was solely to maximize profits for shareholders.
This theory, which came to be known as shareholder primacy, is
epitomized by Milton Friedman’s seminal 1970 essay, The Social Responsibility Of Business Is to Increase Its Profits,
in which he argued that every corporation should seek solely to
“increase its profits within the rules of the game.” Friedman’s
shareholder-centric view of corporate purpose posited that a corporation
that “takes seriously its responsibilities for providing employment,
eliminating discrimination, avoiding pollution and whatever else may be
the catchwords of the contemporary crop of reformers” would undermine
“the basis of a free society.”
We long have advocated for a broader view of corporate purpose than
that espoused by Friedman — initially, as we wrote in 1979 in Takeover Bids in the Target’s Boardroom,
to empower boards to take into account the interests of all
stakeholders, including the communities in which corporations operate,
in repudiating takeover bids by opportunistic raiders; and later, to
ensure that directors are encouraged to resist short-termist pressures
and can exercise their business judgment to consider the variety of
stakeholder interests essential to promoting sustainable success and
growth in long-term corporate value. The 2008 financial crisis laid bare
the dangers of the Friedman doctrine and marked the decline of
shareholder primacy, exposing the reality that an exclusive focus on
short-term maximization of shareholder value came at the expense of
sustainable growth and innovation. Business leaders, policymakers, and
investors have since increasingly advocated for a broader view of
corporate purpose, one that promotes the long-term value of the
corporation.
The growing acceptance of stakeholder corporate governance is
captured by, among other developments, the World Economic Forum’s
publication of The
New Paradigm: A Roadmap for an Implicit Corporate Governance
Partnership Between Corporations and Investors to Achieve Sustainable
Long-Term Investment and Growth; the Davos Manifesto 2020 (see our prior memo here); and the Business Roundtable’s 2019 rejection of the shareholder-centric view to which it had held firm over the prior two decades (see our prior memo here).
Stakeholder corporate governance’s acceptance is also seen in the many
actions and investments by corporations intended to benefit
stakeholders, including investors and non-investor constituencies, and
to reduce negative externalities.
The term “ESG” was popularized in the early 2000s following the publication of the UN Global Compact’s report, Who Cares Wins.
Today, the concept of ESG is multifaceted: companies and boards take
into account ESG and stakeholder considerations when developing and
delivering products and services, making business decisions, managing
risk, developing long-term strategy, recruiting and retaining talent and
investing in the workforce, implementing compliance programs, and
crafting public disclosures. Many major asset managers, including
BlackRock, State Street, and Vanguard as well as actively managed funds,
consider ESG issues in formulating investment strategies, serving their
clients, and exercising their fiduciary responsibilities. This
encompasses investors being able to exercise their professional judgment
in considering ESG-related information when evaluating the risk and return
profile of portfolio holdings. Certain ESG investment funds may also
invest exclusively in companies that satisfy predetermined ESG
standards. And regulators and enforcement authorities develop principles
to promote consistency and reliability across ESG disclosures, and
scrutinize such disclosures in companies’ public filings.
The phenomenon of ESG is prevalent not only in the United States but
around the world, as companies, policymakers, global leaders, academics,
and investors debate how best to promote sustainability over the long
term. ESG, properly understood, is not a unitary principle or even a
collection of a fixed set of particular principles. Rather, ESG
encapsulates the range of risks that all corporations must carefully
balance, taking into account their specific circumstances, in seeking to
achieve long-term, sustainable value. It is thus no surprise that asset
managers and asset owners, too, are expecting well-run companies to
incorporate ESG matters into their business decisions appropriately.
Although the ESG moniker is relatively recent, corporate boards and
management have long considered ESG factors and risks in setting and
executing strategy. As Jeffrey Sonnenfeld recently
pointed out, doing so is associated with superior financial results,
and consistent with long-accepted norms as to the place of business in
society.
To be sure, not all market participants embrace ESG principles.
Recently, an anti-ESG movement has emerged, one opposed to consideration
of ESG factors in investment decision-making in favor of a Friedmanist
exclusive focus on shareholder primacy. This false dichotomy between ESG
and shareholder value mirrors the confusion sewn by critics of
stakeholder governance who pit shareholders against other stakeholders
through the misleading allure of an existential conflict that requires
directors to choose between value for one versus the other. But as we
have previously explained here and here,
the law of corporate fiduciary duties nowhere demands that choice — and
opponents of stakeholder governance know it, as do critics of ESG. The
purpose of a corporation is to conduct a lawful, ethical, profitable,
and sustainable business in order to ensure the success and grow the
value of the corporation over the long term. This requires consideration
of all of the stakeholders critical to the success of the business
(shareholders, employees, customers, suppliers, and communities), as
determined by directors based on their business judgment and informed by
regular engagement with shareholders. Such consideration includes
ensuring that a company avoids ESG blindspots.
The first principle of corporate law is that a corporation must
conduct lawful business by lawful means. To honor this axiom, the Caremark doctrine requires
that companies have in place information and reporting systems
reasonably designed to provide timely, accurate information to allow
management and the board to reach informed judgments about the
corporation’s compliance with law and its business performance. The
stakeholder governance model aligns closely with Caremark — for
example, environmental risks have long been a core focus of compliance
programs, and to the extent a company adequately addresses these risks
through comprehensive compliance programs and operational adjustments,
it will be well-positioned to meet the demands of the environmental
component of ESG. As we recently wrote,
it is important for companies to have high-quality risk management
policies and processes, and for boards to oversee the monitoring and
management of risk, to protect the long-term value of the company, and
to fulfill Caremark duties. Risk management policies and
oversight must reach ESG and sustainability-related risks that can
damage and disrupt a company’s strategies, business positioning,
operations, and relations with stakeholders, including over the long
term.
A holistic, stakeholder view of corporate purpose does not exalt ESG
as the sole or weightiest consideration — to the contrary, it recognizes
that the various elements of ESG are among numerous considerations that
are essential to a company’s sustainability and that must be carefully
balanced by the board and management, in consultation with shareholders,
to ensure the long-term health and prosperity of the business. One
example, highlighted by BlackRock in its written response to
the attorneys general, is the long-term risk to companies posed by
climate change and the economic opportunities from the energy
transition. By engaging with shareholders and thought leaders on these
complex topics, management teams and boards can arm themselves with the
knowledge necessary to understand the relevant risks and to develop
strategies to support sustainable growth.
The unfortunate confusion that has entered the contemporary debate
regarding ESG misunderstands the fundamental purpose of the corporation.
We continue to believe it is essential that boards operate under a
governance model that permits consideration of ESG principles and
sustainable investment strategies, with the support of investors and
asset managers, to promote long-term corporate value and to fortify the
enterprise against relevant risks. There should be no doubt that the law
in Delaware and in every other U.S. jurisdiction empowers boards to
follow this course for responsible corporate stewardship and corporate
success.
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