As the world continuously faces multidimensional crises, experiencing sudden, rapid, and intense changes, or 'Global Permacrises,' the business sector must adapt and evolve from the traditional laissez-faire business model, which is primarily profit-driven, towards a sustainable business model that responds to long-term sustainability. This shift gives rise to five challenging questions for the business sector:
If we cannot answer these questions, we risk facing "Predictable Surprises." Therefore, to avoid such surprises, we must be able to address all five questions.
Nowadays, the business sector cannot be separated from the global community. Therefore, we must look at the ecosystem in a systemic context and have a big picture that can link global, national, and corporate levels.
At the global level, there are the 17 Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), with only seven years remaining to achieve them. However, only major corporations are currently attempting to respond to these SDGs, and they are only able to address some of them.
At the national level, we have the Bio, Circular and Green (BCG) Economy, which is a national agenda that can address the global agenda by linking with the SDGs. However, the BCG lacks clear and powerful strategies and mechanisms to drive it forward.
At the corporate level, there is the Environment, Social, and Governance (ESG) criteria, which currently lacks a connection with the two previous levels and lacks the critical mass to genuinely drive the sustainable movement.
The SDGs, BCG, and ESG are not new topics. Yet, they are still being handled individually and are not systematically linked. To link these three elements, all stakeholders involved at the global level, such as the United Nations, at the national level, such as the Board of Investment, and at the corporate level, like the Stock Exchange of Thailand, must:
The transformation towards a sustainable business must be systemically driven. Private organizations cannot do this alone. If these questions can't be answered, systemic transformation will not occur.
It is evident that sustainable business is an extension of what has been in place, not something new. It still needs sustainable growth to achieve sustainable profit. Companies must change their mindset from viewing the move towards sustainable business as an expense to considering it as an investment that will yield returns in the future.
Data updated on May 29, 2023
Source: National Science and Technology Development Agency (NSTDA)
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