Most
observers agree that international business must play a large role in Myanmar’s
economic transformation, but there is not yet a consensus on how this should
occur. Should additional obligations be placed on international firms over and
above compliance with any (voluntary) international codes of conduct under the
United Nations or the OECD? How much corporate social responsibility should
companies practice if and when they enter Myanmar? Are there effective ways of
getting better business behaviour in a ‘regulation free zone’ like Myanmar, or
will market-driven international companies inevitably be able exploit loopholes
in Myanmar laws?
After 1990, a comprehensive
international socio-economic disengagement from Myanmar occurred as OECD
members imposed a variety of political and economic sanctions against the
military regime when it did not allow a transfer of power after Myanmar’s 1990 elections.
For at least 20 years, whether prohibited under the sanctions by OECD members,
or whether effectively discouraged by official policies or simply by adverse
market conditions, most members of the international business community had
ceased conducting business with Myanmar. They effectively disengaged from
Myanmar, closing down distribution and supply networks, ending commercial
intelligence gathering, and ultimately dispensing with much in-house basic
operational know-how about Myanmar. Meanwhile, Myanmar’s own broad regulatory
framework to ensure proper governance in business and social arrangements
largely lapsed.
The philosophy of corporate social
responsibility (CSR) has always attracted a good deal of criticism, as being
‘mainly public relations’, or worse, as ‘corporate greenwashing’. Among the
companies which remained in Myanmar after 1990, some had turned to CSR to
counter criticisms of their working under a military regime and against the
spirit of international sanctions. So CSR is not new in Myanmar. It was
accepted after 1990 by the military regime, which allowed some foreign and
domestic firms to conduct CSR-like activities, perhaps because Myanmar badly
needed new foreign investment. The speed and unexpected nature of the initial
political and economic reforms in Myanmar, combined with Myanmar obviously not
being ready for international business, also generated a plethora of corporate
social responsibility recommendations and proposals during 2011–12.
In the immediate aftermath of the start
of Myanmar’s reforms in 2011, a rush of reports from global risk management
companies warned about the risks associated with conducting business in
Myanmar. In particular, the June 2013 McKinsey Global institute report, which
was relatively positive about Myanmar’s economic prospects, warned soberly that ‘all
the fundamentals — political and macroeconomic stability, the rule of law,
enablers such as skills and infrastructure — must be in place’.
In a significant move, in response to
the unusual Myanmar situation, the United Nations itself decided in 2012 to
escalate its efforts to provide a safety net for business activities in
Myanmar. UN Secretary-General Ban Ki Moon himself ‘launched’ the Global Compact
in Myanmar on 1 May 2012, enlisting the participation of
companies operating in Myanmar. UN-associated international
financial institutions such as the World Bank and the Asian Development Bank
were also notable for their strong endorsement of CSR in Myanmar at this time.
Since May 2013, US firms reopening
business operations in or with Myanmar have been required to submit regular
reports on their activities demonstrating their compliance with responsible
business principles. The EU and the UK have also been pro-active in fostering
‘responsible business’ behaviour in Myanmar. At the moment, any UK or EU
company seriously thinking of entering the Myanmar market is encouraged to
consult the Office of Responsible Business, which was set up in the British
Embassy in 2013.
The Myanmar government itself in 2012
announced its intention to sign onto the Extractive Industries Transparency
Initiative, for which Australia has provided technical support. As leader of
the opposition, Chair of the National League for Democracy Aung San Suu Kyi has
explicitly advocated ethical business practices in her numerous meetings with
business leaders during all her overseas visits since 2013. In addition, the
OECD’s ‘Investment Policy Review of Myanmar’, released on 1 March 2014, gave prominence to the need
for ‘responsible business’ principles to be observed by international firms
operating in Myanmar. Domestic public support has also come from Myanmar’s
non-government organisations, such as the peak Myanmar business organisation,
the Union of Myanmar Federation of Chambers of Commerce and Industry and from
international NGOs such as the International Bar Association and human rights
monitoring groups.
Foreign firms setting up in
Myanmar henceforth cannot afford to ignore such developments. It would be folly
for companies to ignore CSR factors when doing business in Myanmar at this
point in time. Their responsibility to do so under voluntary international
codes should be sufficient guidance, given that one way or another all foreign
corporate entities will be similarly constrained.
Trevor Wilson is a Visiting Fellow at
the ANU College of Asia and the Pacific and a former Australian ambassador to
Myanmar.
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