Far removed from the markets they're meant to serve, insensitive
to market needs, inflexible in how they do business, America's
oliuopolistic corporations are terrorizing consumers. The result is
that the American market system does not work as it should, and
indeed, performs far below its potential. Samli argues that the
system should not be treated as though it were sacrosanct. Indeed,
it must be made to do more than it is doing to encourage
competition and create consumer value--things it neglects, says
Samli, because of a mistaken notion that laissez-fairism is working
well, and that in today's free economy things are just fine. Not
so, and corporations are actually suffering on their bottom lines.
By creating true consumer value and by stopping their headlong rush
to merge and thereby decrease competition, corporations can achieve
their profit goals more easily, and even establish higher ones. The
trick is to pay more attention to their customers, to be more
responsive to their needs and wishes, and in Samli's words, to turn
a kinder and gentler face to the world. His book is a challenging,
provocative declaration for policy makers in the public and private
sectors, and for academics, an important adjunct to their studies
of how business, government, and society interact.
First, says Samli, merger mania must stop. Government must
exercise its full power to protect, inform, and educate
consumers--and take care that business, unchecked, does not prey
upon them. He cites evidence that consumers are not equal, that
many are frail and vulnerable, and that in many markets they are
simply being ignored. Samli maintains that far from being hostile
to business, he sees business as actually working against itself.
If business thinks of, and works for, the benefit of the consumer,
if it eschews strategies that simply cut costs and contribute to
self-enlargement, consumers will become empowered. In fact, Samli
calls for more regulation, not less, and for more competition. He
also calls for consumers who are better educated, and for the
nation to cultivate its resources--human and environmental--in ways
that will enhance economic performance, not only for society that
depends on corporations, but for corporations themselves that
depend on society.
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