Fixing the problem ... and the role of smaller companies
It is not as if the problem of corporate power and its influence over governments has not been spotted in the past. A wide variety of fixes have been attempted. David Cameron introduced a register of lobbyists in the UK and a similar requirement exists in the EU. These appear to have had little effect.
Many policies requiring the public reporting of corporate donations to political parties, or trying to limit them (as occurred in the USA), have either been ineffective too or challenged in courts. Rules around “revolving door” appointments in the UK are frequently ignored.
It is this failure to fix the issue which has led us at Ethical Consumer to ask the question: is it possible to fix companies themselves to stop the problem occurring in the first place? Our 30 years of studying corporate ethics sees much less lobbying for commercial self-interest and socialising costs by co-operatives, charities, and social enterprises.
This has also led us to another question: is the problem all companies or just multinationals?
There are three answers to this second question.
1. The first is that the problem of socialising costs occurs with companies of all sizes.
2. The second is that, if regulation generally is being undermined by the power of larger companies, even tiny companies can become tempted to do the wrong thing more often.
3. The third is that small companies can become big companies quite quickly if the circumstances are good. Even Google was an SME once.
This is the reason why we have been discussing other mechanisms to raise concern in companies of all sizes around the public interest when necessary.
We identified six key elements for people to help push for:
- community ownership;
- boycotts;
- conversion of for-profit companies;
- equity fines;
- nationalisation in some industries; and
- discouraging new for-profit corporations from being formed.
We will explore these in more detail in future articles.
Most of all, and to tackle the root causes of neoliberalism, we need to be opening up discussion about the nature of business itself and its licence to operate. In 2025, we appear to have lost the language of our ancestors who, when rules permitting the formation of companies were being discussed, were alarmed at the idea of permitting companies to exist that did not have a “public works” focus. (See The Company by John Mickelthwait and Adrian Wooldridge, 2003.)
Encouragingly, Robert Macfarlane, writing in 2025, is one of a few keeping that flame alive, naming it a crisis of imagination that:
"It is unremarkable that a company registered yesterday is, in the eyes of the law, an entity with legal standing and a suite of rights, including the right to sue – but that a river who has flowed for 10,000 years has no rights at all."
The Lush Spring Prize awards in 2025 included a project in Peru which secured rights for a river, to flow, to be free from pollution, and to be restored to health.