BRITISH
ASIANS & CORPORATE CITIZENSHIP
(16 October 2003)
Issues
such as the role of business in society, the behaviour of global
firms, the contributions of ethnic minorities, and the prospects
for racial integration and community cohesion are very much in the
news these days. To discuss many of these issues, The Centre for
Social Markets (CSM) held its National Conference on 15 October
2003 at the Institute of Directors in Pall Mall, London.
The
conference brought together two years of insights and experiences
from CSM's nationwide campaign called 'British Asians: Building
Leadership for Corporate Citizenship' promoting and highlighting
responsible business practice within the Asian business community.
In
her welcome address to the Conference, Ms Malini Mehra, Founder
& Director of the Centre for Social Markets, noted that there
are almost 2 million people of South Asian origin in Britain. She
said: "We form the largest ethnic minority group in the UK
and are estimated to contribute more than £5 billion to the
economy. In Leicester alone, one out of five residents is of Indian
origin, and the city is reputed to have the largest population of
Indians living outside of India. However, we continue to remain
under-represented in political and economic life - and Asian business
champions of integrity are woefully few and virtually unknown by
the public. Given that there are more than 20 million Indians in
the diaspora around the world, it is time to make our contributions
known and felt."
The
conference was an effort to correct this information gap and inspire
visible public leadership - especially by a new generation of Asian
leaders. It demonstrated the crucial importance of Asian business
- not only to the economy, as a source of domestic entrepreneurial
drive, and contributing an estimated 10% of the UK's total GDP -
but also as a key link to foreign markets, and a key potential contributor
to community development, social cohesion and racial integration.
With ethnic minorities set to overtake the indigenous population
in the EU workforce by 2010, it is time for employers and policy
makers to take heed of the implications for their future strategies.
In
her message to the conference, Patricia Hewitt MP, Secretary of
State for Trade & Industry, said: "I'd like to join with
the Centre for Social Markets in stressing the importance of responsible
entrepreneurship. By contributing to the social and physical environments
around them, I believe that Asian businesses in this country will
be able to go from strength to strength and fulfill their great
potential. I would particularly like to endorse the message that
CSM sends to Asian business leaders, regarding the importance of
businesses being engaged in communities, and taking seriously their
corporate responsibility."
The
Keynote Address was delivered by the Rt. Hon. Stephen Timms MP,
Minister for Corporate Social Responsibility at the Department of
Trade & Industry (DTI). The Minister congratulated CSM for its
pioneering efforts in bringing the Asian business community into
the mainstream of the national debate on corporate social responsibility
(CSR). Reflecting on his own constituency in East London, the Minister
noted the transformation of the Green Street area through enterprise
support, and the need to promote CSR not as an 'add-on, but very
much as part of a company's DNA and its work culture. He noted the
DTI's support of CSM's initiative through sponsorship of CSM's report,
'Giving Something Back: South Asian Business and CSR', launched
at the conference, and emphasized the need for more such 'partnerships
for progress.'
The
conference featured a number of distinguished speakers from the
world of business and industry. In his address, Mr Digby Jones,
Director-General of the Confederation of British Industry (CBI),
emphasized the need for 'socially-inclusive wealth creation'. He
noted the many positive contributions made by Asian firms to the
UK economy and the important trading relationship between India
and the UK. He was convinced that Asian business had a major role
to play not only in Britain, but in the world through the international
diaspora.
Mr
Karan Bilimoria, Managing Director of Cobra Beer, provided an example
of a leading Asian-run firm actively engaged in community life in
the UK. An early supporter of CSM's campaign, he said that it had
'opened his eyes' to the need to promote corporate citizenship more
vigorously in the Asian community and emphasized the need for public
leadership to change stereotypes. In his speech, Mr George Cox,
Director-General of the Institute of Directors (IOD), noted the
IOD's commitment to bringing about an all-inclusive enterprise culture
and supporting small enterprises - the majority of UK business -
in implementing good practice. The IOD is a key partner in CSM's
follow-up activities to the conference.
Mr
Ram Gidoomal, Chairman of the London Sustainability Exchange, and
well-known as the challenger in the Mayor of London elections, noted
the need to address political and economic challenges facing the
Asian community - including the 'culture of exclusion' illustrated
by the fact that the London Assembly still lacked a single Asian
despite there being 1 million Asians in London.
Other
distinguished speakers included Baroness Greengross, Chair of the
All-party Parliamentary Group on Corporate Social Responsibility;
Ms Geeti Singh, Asian Businesswoman of the Year 2003, Mr Tony Sarin,
Chair of the Asian Business Association; Mr Klaus Koerner of the
European Commission, and many others.
ABOUT
THE CENTRE FOR SOCIAL MARKETS
The
Centre for Social Markets (CSM) is a non-profit organisation based
in Britain and India. CSM works with a variety of different groups
in developing and developed countries to make markets work for the
Triple Bottom Line - people, planet and profit.
The
BALCC campaign was launched at the Royal Society for Arts, Commerce
& Manufactures (RSA) in London in July 2001. Since then it has
held 10 Stakeholder Dialogues in all the leading cities in England,
Wales and Scotland with a high concentration of Asians (London,
Cardiff, Leicester, Birmingham, Manchester/Stockport, Glasgow and
Cardiff) on the theme of ethnic business and corporate citizenship.
The objective was to mobilise leadership by the Asian community
on key issues facing business and society in today's multi-cultural
Britain.
This
initiative is part of CSM's international programme on Ethnic Minority
& Diaspora Communities that seeks to draw under-represented
communities into the debate on corporate responsibility. The programme
will extend to other ethnic communities in Britain and Europe, and
through the huge Indian and Chinese diasporas in Africa and Asia,
in 2004.
Click
here for the Corporate
Citizenship leaflet. ( ,
265KB)
Click here for the Corporate
Citizenship program. (
777Kb)
Click
here to visit the CSM
website.
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