Survival in such circumstances becomes a priority in
order to allow the fi rm to develop a revised strategy to
stay in business.
Th
ere is, however, a limit to the time and to the scale
of losses that can be tolerated. If a
fi rm is not covering
its variable costs, then closure would seem to be the
only sensible outcome. If variable costs (but not total
costs) are being recouped, then it is possible for the fi rm
to continue in business a little
longer so that it can try
to map out a retrieval strategy. In the UK, for example,
retailers of fashion clothes, electrical goods, books and
music products have been badly aff ected by the growth
of Internet sales. Not all have been able to implement a
successful retrieval strategy.
Ethical objectives
In some respects satisfi cing can be viewed as an ethical
objective for a fi rm to pursue as the pursuit of maximum
profi t is not always in the best interests of society. Much
wider is the notion of corporate social responsibility and
why many fi rms now incorporate aspects in their mission
statements.
An important consideration here is the growing
number of cases where unscrupulous fi rms
appear to put
self-interest before the wider interest of others. Typical
examples are:
■
the growing instances of serious damage to the natural
environment caused by firms, resulting in pollution, the loss
of renewable resources and damage
to the natural habitat
■
the exploitation of child and adult labour, particularly
in the production of clothing in developing
economies
■
exposing workers to serious health risks in the production
of toys and consumer goods
■
paying poor farmers in developing
economies low prices for
their produce.
It is within this context that a growing number of fi rms
have stepped back from the endless pursuit of profi t and
sought to have a more responsible attitude to how what
they are selling is sourced and produced.
One of the earliest and best examples in the UK of an
ethically focused fi rm is Th
e
Body Shop, which has sought
to bring sustainable products to its customers worldwide.
It has also been at the forefront of supporting many
environmental projects, animal welfare initiatives and
educational programmes in developing economies. Other
examples are banana exporters and coff ee,
tea and cocoa
manufacturers who only source from fair trade farmers
and suppliers. In this way, producers receive a guaranteed
price for what they produce, so avoiding the vagaries of
the market.
However, deliberately cutting the price
to reduce profi t might
be a strategy to deter new entrants into the market. Th
is was
referred to earlier as predatory pricing. If new entrants still
appear, a price war may be a tactic to squeeze them out.
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