Can corporations really trust the Conference Board?By Scott Shepard For some inexplicable reason I have a clear, if fleeting, memory from early youth of hearing either MacNeil or Lehrer drone, in one of their ponderous voice-of-God tones, "and the Conference Board anticipates …." At the time I think I figured it was a government agency, to the extent I thought about it at all, and that impression stuck with me for many years. As it turns out, of course, the Conference Board is not a government entity. Rather, it is a non-profit that offers advice to its business-leader members. And it claims to provides these services in an objective way. "We believe in innovative approaches that make you think – and act – differently. And everything we do reflects the input of our Members and their real-world challenges. We do this by delivering business insights. Because we are independent, nonpartisan, and nonprofit, our insights are trusted."(The italics are those of the Conference Board.) So the Conference Board claims that it can be trusted by its members to be nonpartisan and, presumably, objective, so that its members (sorry, "Members") can rely on Conference Board pronouncements while upholding fiduciary duty. That is a falsifiable claim, and one that has, since I began to watch developments at the Board a few years ago, seemed increasingly false. For while the Board portrays itself as a "think tank that delivers Trusted Insights for What's Ahead™ to help our Members improve performance and better serve society," (again, the Board's italics), it turns out that its vision of what's best for society is, wearyingly, the same as that of the ESG warriors and the Biden Administration and the World Economic Forum – and that the Board's employees actively avoid knowing anything that might get in the way of its assertions that what the Conference Board wants for society is what society wants and what's possible, likely, and right. That doesn't sound as though the Conference Board is a very trustworthy source of nonpartisan information. Obviously, I should have some evidence in support of this claim. And so I offer the following email, sent six weeks ago, to Paul Washington, the head of the Conference Board's ESG outfit. Note that this is the whole of the correspondence, because in those six weeks Washington made no effort to respond, and has not otherwise gotten in touch with me or with the National Center for Public Policy Research, my employer and the "we" to whom I refer in the email. (Per that email, we are, among other things, what's broadly understood as "anti-ESG" shareholder activists.) Now, I ask you, if you represented a nonpartisan organization that was genuinely interested in collecting information upon which to build trusted conclusions, instead of acting in partisanship to build a narrative in which trust cannot reside, is this how you would behave? (Note, I corrected two spelling errors I made in the email, using brackets. I should proofread emails carefully, of course, but I should also go to the gym four times a week.) * * *
The forces that have pushed corporate America hard to the left all pretend to be following the science, the evidence or stakeholder demands in non-partisan ways – while in fact they're paying outside groups to feed them information predesigned and partisanly designed to point them in the direction that they've already chosen. When does the whole system, and knowing participation in it, become outright fraud? Scott Shepard is a fellow at the National Center for Public Policy Research and Director of its Free Enterprise Project. This first appeared at RealClearMarkets and is reprinted with the kind permission of the NCPPR.
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