Economic Impacts of Social Injustice

I have always wondered if economic prosperity will reduce injustice, but sometimes I find evidence that it may not. Historically economic prosperity has been synonymous with injustice due to the continuous widened gap between the rich and the poor. Tens of millions, particularly children, women, and the elderlies are continuously thrown into poverty as the rich get richer. The disproportionate wealth distribution has also widened by unequal access to capital, education, and access to health controlled by a privileged group over an underprivileged population.
The high-end focused consumptions of social amenities that should have been made available for all but only enjoyed by the privileged further grows poverty and racism.

Corporate social responsibility partner

As a corporate social responsibility partner, we help make a difference!
How can we help make the difference? We believe that multinational corporations have a vast influence on community behaviors if properly channeled. “An example is when product health information printed on a food item, are found to influence how consumers think about their health.” We plan to help corporations understand their production impact on society. We will help resolve or reduce the impact on society. This way, the consumer can continue to enjoy the product and see that they care.

Indentured servitude is banned, but what about students seeking to sell shares of their future earnings in exchange for money up front to pay for their college tuitions?

An economy that does not invest in the community and its people promotes injustice that leads to income inequality, health and social problems, and lower rates of social responsibilities for good. Corporations that lack outward-looking corporate responsibilities strategies risk losing their consumer loyalty to competitors that do. Together we can make a difference.

Our motivation

We cannot continue to ignore the importance of a measured corporate social responsibility impact in ways that continues to invest in human capital for high-end consumption.

Hence our work must consider economic justice in ways that;

  1. Assess fair wages and benefits
  2. Inform access to adequate housing, social services, child care, adult care, education, health care, financial services, and transportation;
  3. The removal of environmental, health, and occupational hazards that disproportionately affect low-income people and impacts climate change
  4. Government and corporate policy assessments to promote economic investment in the urban core and rural communities.
  5. Solutions to create a more equitable criminal justice system.
  6. Support campaign reforms that ensure equal access to health care.

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