The Ten Worst
Corporations of 2001
Russell Mokhiber
and Robert Weissman / Multinational Monitor 2jan02
In a year marked not only by the now-standard forms of corporate marauding
but also by brazen wartime profiteering, it was no easy chore to identify
Multinational Monitor's 10 corporations of 2001.
The competition was even tougher than usual. But choices had to be made. And
now decisions have been reached.
Multinational Monitor has named Abbott Laboratories, Argenbright, Bayer,
Coke, Enron, Exxon Mobil, Philip Morris, Sara Lee, Southern Co. and Wal-Mart as
the 10 worst corporations of 2001
Appearing in alphabetical order, the 10 worst are:
- Abbott Laboratories, for its TAP
Pharmaceuticals, a joint venture with Japanese Takeda Pharmaceuticals. TAP
was forced to pay $875 million to resolve criminal charges and civil
liability in connection with allegations of major Medicare reimbursement
fraud. Among other alleged fraudulent activities, as a way of hooking
doctors on prescribing Lupron, its prostate cancer drug, TAP gave doctors
free samples and then encouraged doctors to bill Medicare for the free
samples.
- Argenbright, the security company, for
repeat violations of regulations for airport security. Argenbright's
appalling record -- including violations of security rules it had been
caught breaking just a year earlier -- helped convince Congress to
federalize U.S. airport security operations.
- Bayer, for its overcharge of the
government and public for the anti-anthrax drug Cipro, based on a patent
monopoly that may well be improperly maintained by virtue of a collusive
arrangement with a generic manufacturer. Bayer also secured a place on the
10 worst list for its dangerous peddling of antibiotics for poultry
(contributing to antibiotic resistance among humans) and its harassment of a
German watchdog group, Coalition Against Bayer Dangers, for maintaining a BayerWatch.com
website.
- Coca Cola, for its sponsorship of the
first Harry Potter movie and possible sequels, using a children's favorite
to hawks its unhealthy product, and for alleged complicity with death squads
in Colombia targeting union leaders there.
- Enron, for costing many of its
employees their life savings by refusing to let them dump company stock from
their pension plans, as Enron plunged toward bankruptcy.
- ExxonMobil, for leading the global
warming denial campaign (even O'Dwyer's a leading rag of the public
relations industry, has chastised the company for its "stubborn refusal
to acknowledge the fact that burning fossil fuels has a role in global
warming") and blocking efforts at appropriate remedial action, plus a
host of other reckless activities.
- Philip Morris, for its "we've
changed" marketing campaign -- revealed to be a hoax by a Czech study
it commissioned alleging cost savings from smoking-related premature deaths,
as well as the company's ongoing efforts to addict millions of new smokers.
- Sara Lee, for a scandal involving its
Ball Park Franks hot dogs. Listeria-contaminated Ball Park Franks killed 21
and seriously injured 100 in 1998. In 2001, with civil and criminal
litigation around the case heating up, the Detroit Free Press reported that
Sara Lee stopped performing tests for bacteria after it started recording
too many positives. The U.S. attorney, which handled prosecution of the
criminal case, insists Sara Lee did not know about the presence of listeria
in its hot dogs. In an extraordinary move, the U.S. attorney issued a joint
press release with Sara Lee announcing settlement of the case. The final
tally: 21 dead. A misdemeanor plea. A $200,000 fine.
- Southern Co., the largest electric utility in the United States,
for its efforts to defeat sensible air pollution regulations. Southern is a
heavy user of coal, and leads the fight to maintain a ridiculous
"grandfather" clause in the U.S. Clean Air Act, which exempts
power plants built before 1970 from Clean Air Act standards.
- Wal-Mart, for continuing to source
products from overseas sweatshops, for viciously battling efforts to
unionize any fraction of its workforce (the largest in the United States,
among private employers), and for contributing to the sprawl that blights
the U.S. landscape.
For a complete version of Multinational Monitor's article naming the 10 worst
corporations of 2001, see www.essential.org/monitor
Russell Mokhiber is editor of the Washington, D.C.-based Corporate Crime
Reporter. Robert Weissman is editor of the Washington, D.C.-based Multinational
Monitor. They are co-authors of Corporate Predators: The Hunt for MegaProfits
and the Attack on Democracy (Monroe, Maine: Common Courage Press, 1999; http://www.corporatepredators.org
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