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I think we're all aware
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that the world today is full of problems.
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We've been hearing them
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today and yesterday and every day for decades.
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Serious problems, big problems, pressing problems.
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Poor nutrition, access to water,
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climate change, deforestation,
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lack of skills, insecurity, not enough food,
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not enough health care, pollution.
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There's problem after problem,
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and I think what really separates this time
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from any time I can remember in my brief time
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on Earth is the awareness of these problems.
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We're all very aware.
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Why are we having so much trouble
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dealing with these problems?
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That's the question I've been struggling with,
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coming from my very different perspective.
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I'm not a social problem guy.
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I'm a guy that works with business,
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helps business make money.
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God forbid.
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So why are we having so much problems
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with these social problems,
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and really is there any role for business,
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and if so, what is that role?
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I think that in order to address the question,
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we have to step back and think about
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how we've understood and pondered
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both the problems and the solutions
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to these great social challenges that we face.
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Now, I think many have seen business
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as the problem, or at least one of the problems,
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in many of the social challenges we face.
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You know, think of the fast food industry,
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the drug industry, the banking industry.
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You know, this is a low point
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in the respect for business.
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Business is not seen as the solution.
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It's seen as the problem now, for most people.
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And rightly so, in many cases.
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There's a lot of bad actors out there
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that have done the wrong thing,
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that actually have made the problem worse.
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So this perspective is perhaps justified.
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How have we tended to see the solutions
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to these social problems,
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these many issues that we face in society?
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Well, we've tended to see the solutions
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in terms of NGOs,
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in terms of government,
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in terms of philanthropy.
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Indeed, the kind of unique organizational entity
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of this age is this tremendous rise of NGOs
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and social organizations.
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This is a unique, new organizational form
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that we've seen grown up.
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Enormous innovation, enormous energy,
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enormous talent now has been mobilized
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through this structure
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to try to deal with all of these challenges.
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And many of us here are deeply involved in that.
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You know, I'm a business school professor,
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but I've actually founded, I think, now, four non-profits.
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Whenever I got interested and became aware
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of a societal problem, that was what I did,
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form a non-profit.
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That was the way we've thought about how to deal
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with these issues.
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Even a business school professor has thought about it that way.
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But I think at this moment,
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we've been at this for quite a while.
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We've been aware of these problems for decades.
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We have decades of experience
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with our NGOs and with our government entities,
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and there's an awkward reality.
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The awkward reality is we're not making
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fast enough progress.
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We're not winning.
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These problems still seem very daunting
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and very intractable,
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and any solutions we're achieving
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are small solutions.
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We're making incremental progress.
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What's the fundamental problem we have
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in dealing with these social problems?
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If we cut all the complexity away,
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we have the problem of scale.
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We can't scale.
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We can make progress. We can show benefits.
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We can show results. We can make things better.
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We're helping. We're doing better. We're doing good.
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We can't scale.
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We can't make large-scale impact on these problems.
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Why is that?
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Because we don't have the resources.
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And that's really clear now.
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And that's clearer now than it's been for decades.
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There's simply not enough money
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to deal with any of these problems at scale
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using the current model.
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There's not enough tax revenue,
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there's not enough philanthropic donations
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to deal with these problems the way we're dealing with them now.
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We've got to confront that reality.
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And the scarcity of resources
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for dealing with these problems is only growing,
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certainly in the advanced world today,
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with all the fiscal problems we face.
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So if it's fundamentally a resource problem,
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you know, where are the resources in society?
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How are those resources really created,
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the resources we're going to need to deal
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with all these societal challenges?
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Well there, I think the answer is very clear:
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they're in business.
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All wealth is actually created by business.
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Business creates wealth
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when it meets needs at a profit.
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That's how all wealth is created.
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It's meeting needs at a profit
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that leads to taxes
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and that leads to incomes
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and that leads to charitable donations.
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That's where all the resources come from.
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Only business can actually create resources.
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Other institutions can utilize them
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to do important work,
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but only business can create them.
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And business creates them
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when it's able to meet a need at a profit.
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The resources are overwhelmingly
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generated by business.
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The question then is, how do we tap into this?
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How do we tap into this?
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Business generates these resources
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when it makes a profit.
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That profit is that small difference
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between the price and the cost it takes to produce
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whatever solution business has created
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to whatever problem they're trying to solve.
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But that profit is the magic.
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Why? Because that profit allows whatever solution
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we've created
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to be infinitely scalable.
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Because if we can make a profit,
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we can do it for 10, a hundred, a million,
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a hundred million, a billion.
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The solution becomes self-sustaining.
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That's what business does
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when it makes a profit.
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Now what does this all have to do
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with social problems?
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Well, one line of thinking is, let's take this profit
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and redeploy it into social problems.
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Business should give more.
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Business should be more responsible.
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And that's been the path that we've been on
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in business.
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But again, this path that we've been on
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is not getting us where we need to go.
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Now, I started out as a strategy professor,
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and I'm still a strategy professor.
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I'm proud of that.
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But I've also, over the years,
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worked more and more on social issues.
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I've worked on health care, the environment,
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economic development, reducing poverty,
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and as I worked more and more in the social field,
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I started seeing something
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that had a profound impact on me
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and my whole life, in a way.
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The conventional wisdom in economics
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and the view in business has historically been
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that actually, there's a tradeoff
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between social performance and economic performance.
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The conventional wisdom has been
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that business actually makes a profit
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by causing a social problem.
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The classic example is pollution.
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If business pollutes, it makes more money
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than if it tried to reduce that pollution.
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Reducing pollution is expensive,
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therefore businesses don't want to do it.
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It's profitable to have an unsafe working environment.
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It's too expensive to have a safe working environment,
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therefore business makes more money
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if they don't have a safe working environment.
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That's been the conventional wisdom.
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A lot of companies have fallen into that conventional wisdom.
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They resisted environmental improvement.
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They resisted workplace improvement.
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That thinking has led to, I think,
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much of the behavior
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that we have come to criticize in business,
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that I come to criticize in business.
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But the more deeply I got into all these social issues,
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one after another,
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and actually, the more I tried to address them
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myself, personally, in a few cases,
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through non-profits that I was involved with,
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the more I found actually that the reality
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is the opposite.
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Business does not profit
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from causing social problems,
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actually not in any fundamental sense.
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That's a very simplistic view.
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The deeper we get into these issues,
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the more we start to understand
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that actually business profits
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from solving from social problems.
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That's where the real profit comes.
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Let's take pollution.
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We've learned today that actually
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reducing pollution and emissions
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is generating profit.
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It saves money.
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It makes the business more productive and efficient.
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It doesn't waste resources.
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Having a safer working environment actually,
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and avoiding accidents,
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it makes the business more profitable,
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because it's a sign of good processes.
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Accidents are expensive and costly.
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Issue by issue by issue, we start to learn
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that there's no trade-off
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between social progress
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and economic efficiency
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in any fundamental sense.
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Another issue is health.
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I mean, what we've found is actually
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health of employees is something
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that business should treasure,
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because that health allows those employees
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to be more productive and come to work
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and not be absent.
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The deeper work, the new work, the new thinking
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on the interface between business and social problems
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is actually showing that there's a fundamental,
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deep synergy,
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particularly if you're not thinking in the very short run.
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In the very short run, you can sometimes
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fool yourself into thinking
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that there's fundamentally opposing goals,
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but in the long run, ultimately, we're learning
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in field after field that this is simply not true.
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So how could we tap into
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the power of business
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to address the fundamental problems
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that we face?
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Imagine if we could do that, because if we could do,
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we could scale.
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We could tap into this enormous resource pool
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and this organizational capacity.
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And guess what? That's happening now, finally,
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partly because of people like you
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who have raised these issues now
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for year after year and decade after decade.
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We see organizations like Dow Chemical
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leading the revolution away from trans-fat
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and saturated fat with innovative new products.
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This is an example of Jain Irrigation.
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This is a company that's brought drip irrigation technology
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to thousands and millions of farmers,
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reducing substantially the use of water.
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We see companies like the Brazilian forestry company [??]
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that's figured out how to avoid
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tearing down old growth forest
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and using eucalyptus and getting much more yield
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per hectare of pulp
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and making much more paper than you could make
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by cutting down those old trees.
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You see companies like Cisco that are training
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so far four million people in I.T. skills
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to actually, yes, be responsible,
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but help expand the opportunity
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to disseminate I.T. technology
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and grow the whole business.
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There's a fundamental opportunity for business today
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to impact and address these social problems,
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and this opportunity
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is the largest business opportunity
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we see in business.
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And the question is, how can we get business
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thinking to adapt this issue of shared value?
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This is what I call shared value:
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addressing a social issue with a business model.
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That's shared value.
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Shared value is capitalism,
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but it's a higher kind of capitalism.
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It's capitalism as it was ultimately meant to be,
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meeting important needs,
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not incrementally competing for
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trivial differences in product attributes
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and market share.
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Shared value is when we can create social value
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and economic value simultaneously.
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It's finding those opportunities
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that will unleash the greatest possibility we have
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to actually address these social problems
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because we can scale.
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We can address shared value at multiple levels.
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It's real. It's happening.
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But in order to get this solution working,
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we have to now change how business sees itself,
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and this is thankfully underway.
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Businesses got trapped into the conventional wisdom
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that they shouldn't worry about social problems,
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that this was sort of something on the side,
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that somebody else was doing it.
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We're now seeing companies
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embrace this idea.
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But we also have to recognize business
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is not going to do this as effectively
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as if we have NGOs and government
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working in partnership with business.
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The new NGOs that are really moving the needle
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are the ones that have found these partnerships,
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that have found these ways to collaborate.
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The governments that are making the most progress
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are the governments that have found ways
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to enable shared value in business
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rather than see government as the only player
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that has to call the shots.
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And government has many ways in which it could impact
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the willingness and the ability of companies
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to compete in this way.
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I think if we can get business seeing itself differently,
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and if we can get other seeing business differently,
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we can change the world.
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I know it. I'm seeing it.
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I'm feeling it.
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Young people, I think,
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my Harvard Business School students, are getting it.
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If we can break down this sort of divide,
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this unease, this tension,
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this sense that we're not
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fundamentally collaborating here
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in driving these social problems,
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we can break this down,
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and we finally, I think,
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can have solutions.
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Thank you.
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(Applause)