Barron's - USA (2020-10-12)

(Antfer) #1

34 BARRON’S October 12, 2020


OTHER VOICES


To show balance, leaders must personally


violate the core rule under which they are


asked to operate: More is always better.


How Endless Maximization


Is Ruining Business


B


alance is widely ac-


cepted as an essential


feature of human


health. When we


lack balance, we be-


come fundamentally


unhealthy: obese,


workaholic, narcissistic, or obses-


sively thrill-seeking, for example.


Paradoxically, the modern worlds


of economics and business have ad-


opted as their core rule the opposite


of balance: the maximization of a


singular objective. The implicit as-


sumption, bizarrely, is that what is


good for the individual is bad for the


collective, and vice versa. But that


assumption is making business and


the economy fundamentally un-


healthy. Because what is good for the


individual is actually good for the


collective, we need to reverse course


before the sickness destroys us.


The maximization of shareholder


value as the singular goal of the cor-


poration is the most frequently de-


bated manifestation of this core rule.


I am on the record as agreeing that it


is perhaps the dumbest idea in the


world.


But it is merely a symptom. The


problem is that the worlds of both


economics and business have ad-


opted the view that without a simpli-


fying, unitary objective, an organiza-


tion will be unable to make robust,


consistent, and societally optimal


decisions. Luminaries such as eco-


nomics Nobel laureate Milton Fried-


man and superstar finance professor


Michael Jensen have made the argu-


ment so convincingly that it has ef-


fectively become embedded doctrine:


There should be a unitary objective


whereby more is always better.


This is why the implicit rule in


most incentive systems is that selling


more is better—always. At Sears


Auto Centers in the 1990s, more re-


pairs per customer was better, with


no upper bound. At Wells Fargo in


the 2000s, more accounts opened


was better, with no upper bound.


With no balance consideration evi-


dent, employees followed the rule to


such extremes that they created exis-


tential reputational threats for their


organizations. Both companies apolo-


gized and agreed to settlements.


In energy, more proven and proba-


ble reserves is always better, so we


get dangerous drilling and relatively


unlimited hydraulic fracturing. In


managing labor costs, greater “labor-


cost efficiency” is always better, so


there is limitless outsourcing of jobs


to low-cost jurisdictions. In antitrust


policy, more short-term efficiency is


always better, so mergers are now


enabled by the efficiency defense. As


part of the Washington Consensus,


more deregulation and fiscal auster-


ity is always better, so countries en-


gage in deregulation and austerity to


comply. In the health-care system,


more efficient use of working capital


is always better, so minimizing buffer


stocks of personal protective equip-


ment made all sorts of sense—until a


pandemic hit.


When scandal unfolds, we tend to


be baffled at why the leaders involved


didn’t show more of our natural incli-


nation toward balance. We shouldn’t


be. To show balance, leaders must


personally violate the core rule under


which they are asked to operate:


More is always better. Thankfully,


many do; they try to use their own


personal instincts toward balance to


guide their actions. But not enough


leaders take that approach.


Unrestrained pursuit of labor-cost


efficiency has left tens of millions of


American workers earning less than


a living wage while the top 1%


achieve unprecedented wealth. Anti-


trust authorities worshipping at the


altar of efficiency have facilitated the


widespread consolidation of indus-


tries into fewer, more-powerful play-


ers. Judging company performance


solely on the basis of short-term


shareholder value increase has


caused executives to give short shrift


to long-term stewardship of their


employees, communities, and the


environment.


The only way to stop these prac-


tices is to recognize that while sim-


plicity is handy for guiding action, it


ceases to be effective if it is, in fact,


simplistic. That means tearing down


an entire infrastructure of simplisti-


cally extreme rules in business and


economics and building a set of prin-


ciples and practices that seek to


achieve healthy balances. This must


go far beyond making empty state-


ments about balancing the interests


of stakeholders, as with last year’s


statement by the Business Round-


table. Change won’t happen as long


as business, economics, and public-


policy schools still teach the impor-


tance of a singular objective function,


whether explicitly or, more often,


implicitly. And it isn’t going to hap-


pen as long as reward systems are


geared around achieving singular


goals—like achieving this year’s bud-


get, which is still the dominant goal


in much of American public- and


private-sector life.


The good news is that people are


used to struggling with and making


decisions that seek balance. If we stop


putting them in artificial environ-


ments that attempt to negate that in-


stinct for balance, they will thrive.B


Roger L. Martin is professor emeritus at


the Rotman School of Management at


University of Toronto. He is the author


ofWhen More Is Not Better: Overcoming


America’s Obsession with Economic


Efficiency.


By Roger L.


Martin


Illustration by Chiara Vercesi
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