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South African Journal of Business Management

On-line version ISSN 2078-5976
Print version ISSN 2078-5585

Abstract

GANSON, Brian. Shared value as shared power: Business in South Africa's democratic transition. SAJBM [online]. 2023, vol.54, n.1, pp.1-12. ISSN 2078-5976.  http://dx.doi.org/10.4102/sajbm.v54i1.3639.

PURPOSE: This study aimed to better define the boundary conditions of voluntary business engagement for social and economic transformation APPROACH: Case study of the Consultative Business Movement (CBM) in South Africa's democratic transition through historical narrative and analysis, applying both contemporaneous and contemporary lenses FINDINGS: The analysis demonstrates that creating shared value requires shared power, an arrangement into which incumbent businesses may reluctantly enter, and from which they may quickly exit when their own political interests are met but before transformational economic goals have been achieved. Thus, exogenous forces are necessary to dependably shape a private sector that is fully aligned with economic transformation and peaceful development PRACTICAL IMPLICATIONS: Economic and political carrots and sticks combined with the mandatory embedding of business actors in broader networks may be required to ensure that business strategies and operations are more directly the result of consensus reached with more progressive social and economic agents in ways that advance societal goals. Those managers who do want to lead change should take from the experience of CBM the imperative to take no unilateral decisions but rather to share decision-making power with civil society and community actors ORIGINALITY/VALUE: The article challenges and refines discourse that assumes that business interests are broadly aligned with sustainable societal outcomes. It thus sheds light on the boundary conditions for the variety of propositions in the management literature that business and societal aims are largely aligned that have been underexplored

Keywords : Business and peace; business and conflict; business in society; shared value; corporate social responsibility; ESG regulation; corporate governance.

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