It sounds to me like this is a homework question and you're being asked to react to some reading or lecture. Without knowing what was said or written, the members of this forum are unlikely to be able to provide any meaningful help.
But here are few snippets:
A "corporation" per se is just a legal structure for distributed ownership of a company. That structure does not imply that a profit-seeking corporate business is any more ethical than a business owned by a sole proprietor.
Profits drive growth. If a company has a product or service that consumers or other businesses like, use and tell others about, then the company is likely to grow in production and revenue. That means they'll likely have to hire more workers and create more jobs.
In what context is the word "rights" used here? Do members of a society have a right to demand that a business employ a certain number of people or create a minimum number of jobs? That sounds like socialism to me.
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Dear HELP,
It sounds to me like this is a homework question and you're being asked to react to some reading or lecture. Without knowing what was said or written, the members of this forum are unlikely to be able to provide any meaningful help.
But here are few snippets:
A "corporation" per se is just a legal structure for distributed ownership of a company. That structure does not imply that a profit-seeking corporate business is any more ethical than a business owned by a sole proprietor.
Profits drive growth. If a company has a product or service that consumers or other businesses like, use and tell others about, then the company is likely to grow in production and revenue. That means they'll likely have to hire more workers and create more jobs.
In what context is the word "rights" used here? Do members of a society have a right to demand that a business employ a certain number of people or create a minimum number of jobs? That sounds like socialism to me.