Fiduciary Responsibility and ESG: The Erosion of American Manufacturing

Fiduciary Responsibility: The Root of the Problem

Fiduciary responsibility, with its relentless focus on maximizing shareholder value, has been a driving force behind the exodus of manufacturing jobs from America to overseas markets. While it may have boosted shareholder profits, this trend set the stage for the erosion of the American manufacturing base, as it put cost-cutting and cheap labor above domestic job retention and long-term economic stability.

ESG: Making a Bad Situation Worse

The rise of Environmental, Social, and Governance (ESG) criteria isn’t the boon it’s often portrayed as. While cloaked in the language of responsibility, these criteria impose burdensome financial and regulatory costs on American businesses. Organizations must adhere to stringent regulations set by entities like the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), placing them at a disadvantage against foreign competitors operating in less-regulated environments.

The True Cost of Cheap Labor

Pursuing cheap labor markets overseas is not just a strategy—it’s a betrayal of the American workforce. As factories shut down and jobs disappear, the social fabric unravels, particularly in rural communities. High unemployment and the loss of stable, well-paying jobs lead to an array of social problems, from crime to family breakdowns, that extend well beyond the factory floor.

Rural communities, already strapped for employment opportunities, are often the hardest hit when factories close. The offshoring of jobs leads to economic stagnation and the disintegration of communities, a brutal cycle from which many towns never recover.

The Future: A Dire Outlook

Fiduciary responsibility and ESG are not just influencing company decisions; they are actively shaping the American landscape for the worse. If this trajectory continues, we may see the end of “Made in the USA” as a viable label, not merely for certain products but for entire industries.

The harmful impacts of fiduciary responsibility and ESG criteria on American manufacturing cannot be ignored. These mechanisms, far from being harmless or beneficial, have severe repercussions for American workers and communities. Unless we critically examine and challenge these accepted norms, the future of American manufacturing—and by extension, the American dream—remains in jeopardy.