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The Profiteers: How Business Privatizes Profits and Socializes Costs

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An exposé  of how society pays for corporations' "free lunch" and the cost of environmental damage, low wages, systemic discrimination, and cheap goods.

In an age when business leaders solemnly profess dedication to principles of environmental and social justice, Christopher Marquis’s provocative investigation into the real costs of doing business reveals the way that leaders of the corporate world gaslight to evade responsibilities by privatizing profits and socializing costs. “Who pays?” for the resulting climate and environmental damage, racism, low wages, and cheap the average citizen and the taxpayer.

By bringing to light ideas that today are on the fringe but rapidly making their way into the mainstream, Marquis outlines a new regenerative paradigm for business in society. He tells of a group of pioneers trying to not just reform but transform the way business is conducted all over the world. By taking novel actions to reimagine business operations in responsible ways, minimize their negative impacts, and create new ways for business to properly absorb their hidden costs, these leaders provide blueprints to move the needle on vexing social and environmental issues.

What’s in it for leaders of the corporate world? The model of reform presented provides clear guidance on how to get ahead of the curve as an emerging economic order is formed. No business can lead from the front if it is morally-backward looking. History has shown time and again that those who get out in front of emerging changes in our social and environmental landscape protect themselves from inevitable eclipse.
 

352 pages, Hardcover

First published May 14, 2024

About the author

Christopher Marquis

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1 review
June 28, 2024
Right a book
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
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546 reviews19 followers
June 8, 2024
Interesting book. If I were a younger man I would change my retirement investment portfolio. I especially like Long-Term Stock Exchange as a counterweight to the short-term investment strategy of Wall Street, that stifles creativity and innovation.
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