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Ethics and Social Responsibility in International Business

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Identify the key elements in managing ethical behavior across borders ... code for all units around the globe or tailor the code to each local culture ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Ethics and Social Responsibility in International Business


1
Chapter 5
  • Ethics and Social Responsibility in International
    Business

2
Chapter Objectives
  • Describe the nature of ethics
  • Discuss ethics in cross-cultural and
    international contexts
  • Identify the key elements in managing ethical
    behavior across borders
  • Discuss social responsibility in cross-cultural
    and international contexts

3
Chapter Objectives
  • Identify and summarize the basic areas of social
    responsibility
  • Discuss how organizations manage social
    responsibility across borders
  • Identify and summarize the key regulations
    governing international ethics and social
    responsibility

4
Exporting Jobs or Abusing People?
  • Fruit Juice sold to Minute Maid, Tropicana,
    Nestle
  • Soccer balls produced by 8 yr olds in Mexico
  • Nike Asian child labor and unsafe conditions
  • Ethical dilemmas
  • Balance responsibility to stockholders against
    that to society

5
What is Ethics?
  • An individuals personal beliefs about whether a
    decision, behavior, or action is right or wrong
  • Ethical behavior viewed from a societal
    perspective what does society consider ethical?

6
Ethical Behavior - Generalizations
  • Different to different people
  • Usually similar beliefs within a culture
  • May depend on context
  • Vast differences among cultures
  • e.g. bribes
  • 2002 survey Russia, China, Taiwan, South Korea
    vs. Australia, Sweden, Switzerland, Austria,
    Canada

7
Three Elements of Ethics
  • (1) How does the organization treat employees?
  • (2) How do employees treat the organization?
  • (3) How do the organization and employees treat
    other economic agents?

8
How does the organization treat employees?
  • Hiring and firing
  • Solely on ability and performance?
  • Wages and working conditions
  • Employee privacy
  • Opportunities for development

9
How do employees treat the organization?
  • Conflicts of interest
  • Gift giving and receiving
  • Secrecy and confidentiality
  • Laws restricting disclosing sensitive info to
    rivals
  • Ethics of using this sensitive info
  • General honesty

10
Employee and Org. treatment of other economic
agents
  • Bribery
  • Pricing
  • Financial disclosure
  • Advertising practices

11
Company ethics how to influence employees
  • Code of ethics
  • Detailed how employees treat suppliers,
    customers, competitors, others
  • MNCs must decide whether to establish an
    overarching code for all units around the globe
    or tailor the code to each local culture
  • MNCs will often be held to the home country or to
    international standards
  • Current efforts to establish international ethics
    standards (through International Organization for
    Standardization ISO)

12
Company Ethics (cont.)
  • Ethics training
  • Cannot anticipate all potential ethical dilemmas
    and put in a code
  • UPS managers continuously receive ethics
    training, are directly responsible for training
    other employees
  • Code of conduct, ethics training manuals have
    been translated into 29 languages

13
Company Ethics (cont.)
  • Organizational practice and corporate culture
  • How does top management act?
  • How does the organization respond to whistle
    blowers?

14
Social Responsibility
  • Broader than ethics responsibility to protect
    and enhance society
  • Areas of social responsibility
  • Organizational stakeholders directly affected
    by practices and have a stake in perf.
  • Customers
  • Employees
  • Investors
  • Environment
  • General social welfare

15
Map 5.1 Social Responsibility Hot Spots
16
Figure 5.3 Approaches to Social Responsibility
Most Responsible
Least Responsible
Obstructionist Defensive Accommodative
Proactive
17
Obstructionist Stance
  • Do as little as possible to address social or
    environmental problems
  • Hide Questionable Behavior
  • Deny or avoid responsibility
  • Examples
  • Astra
  • Nestle and Danone

18
Defensive Stance
  • Do what is required legally, but nothing more
  • Corporate responsibility is to generate profits
  • Example
  • Philip Morris

19
Accommodative Stance
  • Meet ethical and legal requirements and more
  • Agree to participate in social programs
  • Match contributions by employees
  • Respond to requests from non-profits
  • No proactive behavior to seek such opportunities

20
Proactive Stance
  • Strong support of social responsibility
  • View themselves as stewards and look for ways to
    contribute
  • Examples
  • McDonalds
  • Merck

21
Implementing Social Responsibility
  • Legal Compliance
  • Appropriate functional managers
  • Ethical Compliance
  • Philanthropic Giving

22
Informal Dimensions of Social Responsibility
  • Leadership
  • Create organizational culture
  • Example Johnson Johnson
  • Whistle-blowing
  • Does the organization take it seriously?
  • Do they punish whistle blowers?
  • Affected by culture e.g. Japan

23
Corporate Social Audit
  • Tool for the evaluation of social responsibility
    effectiveness
  • Formal and thorough analysis
  • Define goals, analyze resources devoted to goals,
    evaluate effectiveness, make recom.
  • Conducted by task force

24
Regulating International Ethics and Social
Responsibility
  • Foreign Corrupt Practices Act (1977)
  • Alien Tort Claims Act (1789)
  • U.S. MNCs resp. for human rights abuses of
    foreign govts.
  • Unocal citizens of Burma suing over the use of
    forced labor
  • Anti-Bribery Convention of the Organization for
    Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD)
  • Elim. Bribery in intl. bus.
  • International Labor Organization (ILO)
  • Monitors working conds. in developing countries
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