Title: The Study of Business, Government, and Society
1Chapter 1
- The Study of Business, Government, and Society
2Chapter Outline
- Aristotles Art of Rhetoric
- Two Approaches to Decision Making
- The Deontological Approach
- The Teleological Approach
- Ethical Paradigms
- Exxon Mobil Case
- Business- Government- Society Field
- Four Models of the BGS Relationship
- The Market Capitalism Model
- The Dominance Model
- The Countervailing Forces Model
- The Stakeholder Model
3Aristotles Art of Rhetoric
- Rhetoric
- Art of persuasion through use of spoken language
- From the Greek meaning orator, teacher
- Ethos
- Influence based on character credibility of
speaker - Logos
- Influence based on reasoning
- Pathos
- Influence based on emotion
4Aristotles Art of Rhetoric
- Ethics comes from the ethos rhetoric
- What makes a speaker credible?
- Intelligence
- Virtuous character
- Good will
5Two Approaches to Decision Making
- Deontological Approach
- Act is judged according to its own merits
- The Law is the Law
- Immanuel Kant, Foundations of the Metaphysics of
Morals - Teleological Approach
- Act is judged according to outcome
- The end justifies the means
- Machiavelli, The Prince
- John Stuart Mill, Utilitarianism
6Ethical Paradigms
- Ethical
- Conforming to moral standards
- Standard of conduct
- Paradigm
- Example or pattern
- Philosophical and theoretical framework to
understand an issue - Ethical paradigm
- Philosophical and theoretical framework to
understand an ethical issue
7Ethical Paradigms
- Phrased in terms of 2 positives values in
conflict with each other - Efficient operations vs. product quality
- Material well-being vs. healthy environment
- Increased profits vs. safety
- Increase objectivity in ethical issue analysis by
examining both sides - Nonjudgmental manner
- Comprehensive analysis
8ExxonMobil Case
- Questionable Actions
- 1989 intoxicated captain of Exxon Valdez spilled
11 million gallons of oil into Alaskan waters - 1997 Raymond (CEO) rejected scientific case of
global warming and calls renewable energy a
complete waste of money - 2001 ExxonMobil accepts protection from
Indonesian troops accused of violence against
local villagers
9ExxonMobil Case
- Historical Influences
- John D. Rockefeller
- Standard Oil trust incorporated in 1882
- Brilliant strategist who destroyed competitors
- Believed imposing order on young disorganized
industry justified ruthless tactics - Controlled 90 of American oil industry
- 1890 Congress passed the Sherman Antitrust Act
- 1911 the trust is broken into 39 separate
companies - Rockefeller also known as great philanthropist
10ExxonMobil Case
- Implications
- Effective values become embedded
- Cost control, efficiency, centralized
organization, and suppression of competitors - ExxonMobil 2nd largest corporation and 1st in
profits - One organization, yet interaction with government
and society produces long-lasting and significant
influences - ExxonMobil must be responsive to both economic
and noneconomic environment - 2003 reported losing less than 1 teaspoon/million
gallons
11Business-Government-Society Field
- Business
- Fundamental purpose is to make a profit by
providing services that satisfy human needs - Government
- Economic regulatory powers affecting business
- Society
- Ideas, institutions, material things
12How Institutions Support Markets
13Business-Government-Society Field
- Social Contract
- Between business institution and society
- Defines broad duties that business must perform
to retain societys support - Partly expressed in law
- Also resides in social values
- Complex and ambiguous
- Can meeting social expectation conflict with
maximizing profits?
14Four Models of the BGS Relationship
- The Market Capitalism Model
- The Dominance Model
- The Countervailing Forces Model
- The Stakeholder Model
- Model in use determines
- scope of business power,
- criteria for managerial decisions,
- extent of corporate responsibility,
- ethical duties of managers,
- need for regulation
15The Market Capitalism Model
- Business operates within a market environment
- Primarily responding to economic forces
- Sheltered from direct impact of social and
political forces
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17The Market Capitalism Model
- Model Origins
- Historically people produced for subsistence
- 1700s people start to produce for trade
- Market Economy reshaped human life
- Emerges when people move beyond subsistence
production to production - for trade
18The Market Capitalism Model
- Model Origins
- Adam Smiths, The Wealth of Nations
- Capitalism and the invisible hand
- Markets pricing mechanism reconciled supply
demand making commodities cheaper, better, and
more available - Greater good for society when businesses compete
freely - Managerial Capitalism (early 1900s)
- Market economy in which dominant businesses are
large firms run by salaried managers, not smaller
firms run by owners
19The Market Capitalism Model
- Model Assumptions
- Government interference is slight or
laissez-faire - Government, not business, should correct social
problems - Managers focus on profit and efficiency
- Individuals can own property and freely risk
investments - Markets convert selfish competition into broad
social benefits - Informed consumers making rational decisions
- Moral restraint of business
- Many producers and consumers
20The Market Capitalism Model
- Market Capitalism Model Perspective Conclusions
- Government regulation should be limited
- Markets discipline private economic activity to
promote social welfare - Proper measure of corporate performance is profit
- Ethical duty of management is to promote the
interests of shareholders
21The Market Capitalism Model
- Model Critics
- Creates prosperity only at cost of rising
inequality - Markets erode virtue
- Greed
- Ruthlessness
- Profit motive encourages plundering of the earth
22The Dominance Model
- Perspective of business critics
- Business and government dominate the great mass
of people - Few powerful elite control system that enriches a
few at expense of many - Undemocratic
- Ideal is to turn it upside down
23The Dominance Model
- Began in 1870s
- Resulted in reform movement of Populism
- President, Union Pacific could buy Congress
- Railroad magnate, Vanderbilt The public be
damned! - Rise of unionization of railroads and added
government regulation
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25The Countervailing Forces Model
- Flow of interactions among major elements of
society - Multiple forces, none dominant
- Industrialized nations with democratic traditions
- Differs from market capitalism model
- Business is directly influenced by nonmarket
forces
26The Countervailing Forces Model
- Model Conclusions
- Business must respond to economic and noneconomic
forces - Business is a major initiator of change in
society - Public support of business depends on its
adjustment to multiple social, political, and
economic forces - BGS relationships continuously evolve as changes
take place in society
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28The Stakeholder Model
- Duty toward multiple constituents
- More than just shareholders
- Reorders priorities of management away from those
of market capitalism model - Primary Stakeholder
- Impact is immediate, continuous, and powerful
- Secondary Stakeholder
- Less immediacy, benefit, burden, or power
- Debate over identifying stakeholders
- Vague guidelines to measure success
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