Bringing a Business Approach to Doing Good
A job is better than a handout.
Here’s the ‘social enterprise’ way to put people to work.
By George R. Roberts in the Wall Street Journal
As co-founder of Kohlberg Kravis
Roberts & Co. ( KKR ), I use data to understand untapped potential in a
business. Similarly, data can be used to help unlock potential in communities
across the U.S. Despite declining unemployment, millions of Americans who could
be put to work are trapped outside the labor market. Yet, as with an
underperforming company, there are effective and proven strategies that can
help them realize their potential.
Stigmas and limited skills that
would prepare them for jobs plague many of these potential workers on the
margins of society, including homeless people; young adults disconnected from
work and school; and those formerly incarcerated, or suffering from addiction,
mental illness or other disabilities. Some are single adults or veterans;
others are parents with children.
However, striking new evidence shows
that a business model called social enterprise can provide these people with
training, support and work. Social enterprises leverage a business approach to
address a social mission, making improvements in human and environmental
well-being, rather than maximizing profits for external stakeholders. These
businesses earn and reinvest their revenue to provide more people with jobs
that build skills and a career path. Social-enterprise businesses represent
several industries, including construction, maintenance, landscaping,
manufacturing and electronic-waste recycling, among others, providing both jobs
and training in these fields.
I founded the Roberts Enterprise
Development Fund (REDF) in 1997 to fund not-for-profit endeavors that would
provide training and entry-level jobs for the chronically unemployed. The
organization stuck with it, learned, adapted and improved. Over the past 18
years, REDF-invested enterprises have placed more than 9,500 Californians in
jobs. REDF is not alone—today, social enterprises hire and provide hope for
hundreds of thousands.
Starting in 2011, the federal
government’s Social Innovation Fund chose REDF to expand the model and study
whether it works and is worth the investment. To that end, REDF commissioned
the research firm Mathematica Policy Research to conduct a rigorous,
first-of-its-kind study. Just released, the Mathematica Jobs Study evaluated
seven social enterprises in California, including Chrysalis, which has several
business lines including street cleaning, facilities management and front-desk
staffing, and Hope Builders, a general-contracting company.
One year after accepting a
social-enterprise job, the study reported, workers were more likely to have
stable employment either in a social enterprise or with another employer, and
had greater economic self-sufficiency and more life stability. Before
employment, a quarter of the people in the study had never had a job, and 85%
were homeless or lived in unstable housing, such as shelters, hotels, or with
friends or family. One year later, 62% were working; on average their monthly
work income increased by 268%, their income from government benefits was
reduced to 24% from 71%. Also, the number of people owning or renting a home
throughout the year tripled.
The Mathematica study also shows
that social enterprise delivers a positive return on investment for society.
For every $100,000 invested, the return is $223,000, including savings to
taxpayers with reduced public benefits and avoided incarceration, and
social-enterprise business revenues and workers’ incomes.
At KKR, when we identify a strategy
that works, we try to share it across our portfolio and industries. At REDF, we
have a similar goal, but before we try to expand the power of social enterprise
to help the long-term unemployed, we first need to ensure that workers are
really better off in accepting entry-level jobs. The Mathematica study found
that, on average, workers were poorer by $165 after one year. This was in part
because wages didn’t rise quickly enough to cover increased housing and other
costs. Employers can help these new workers by making sure that they receive
training for greater opportunity and upward mobility.
But we must also ensure that
government policies don’t unintentionally undermine work. When someone who has
been out of work starts a job, he loses housing and other benefits, regardless
of wages. A job should help relieve financial hardships, not create new ones;
the “benefits cliff” is a major disincentive to gainful employment. One
possible solution: Expand the earned-income tax credit that provides tax relief
for low-income working parents of minor children, making it available to
individuals who don’t have children. This type of change would provide an
important incentive to work, and can be made federally or by individual states.
When more people contribute their
talents to the economy, everyone wins. More capital is needed to help fuel this
effort, and to that end I urge my colleagues in the business community to
partner with these social enterprises through their supply chain and hiring
practices to make them and the people they employ as successful as possible.
Mr. Roberts is co-founder and co-CEO
of Kohlberg Kravis Roberts & Co. (KKR), and chairman of the Roberts
Enterprise Development Fund board of directors.
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