Title: Why Business Ethics?
1Why Business Ethics?
- Ethical errors can end careers
- Framework for business operations
- Profitability
- Lower costs
- Personal well-being
- Good will/reputation
2Executives Comments on Reputation
- A reputation good or bad, is tough to shake.
- - Richard Teerlink (CEO, Harley-Davison)
- If we were making that decision now in light of
the press scrutiny we have been receiving, we
probably would not have taken that risk. - - Robert C. Winters (Chairman, Prudential
Ins.) - A bad reputation is like a hangover. It takes a
while to get rid of, and it makes everything else
hurt. - - James Preston (CEO, Avon)
3Why Poor Ethical Conduct?
- Employers over look it
- Belief it wont be discovered
- Hard to place blame
- Lack of clear ethical culture
- Personal gain
- Corporate/supervisor pressure
- Corporate gain
4Types of Ethical Dilemmas
- Individual Values and the Business
- Business and Employee Rights
- Business Operations
- Business and Its Competition
- Business and Its Product
- Business and Its Stakeholders
5Sources of the Business Ethos
BUSINESSETHICS
RELIGION
LAW
PHILOSOPHY
CULTURE
6Aristotles Theory of Responsibility
- You are responsible for your actions unless they
are involuntary. The two factors that create
involuntariness are - 1. IGNORANCE of facts or consequences of
an act - 2. INCAPACITY to perform an action due
to - a. high costs
- b. no power
- c. no alternative
- d. external force
- CAUTION There are some things such that a man
cannot be compelled to do themthat he must
sooner die than do, though he suffer the most
dreadful fate. - Aristotle in The Nicomachean Ethics
7Factors that Shape Business Ethicsin Other
Countries
- HISTORICAL EXPERIENCE
- CULTURAL
- PHILOSOPHY and RELIGION
- STAGE OF ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT
8Moral Guidelines for Multinational Companies
- No intentional direct harm
- Produce more good than bad for host
- Contribute to hosts development
- Respect human rights
- Pay fair share of taxes
- Respect local culture
- Cooperate with the local government
9Factors Influencing Managerial Ethical
- Leadership
- Strategy and performance
- Corporate culture
- Individual characteristics
- Interrelatedness
10How to Build in Ethics
- TOP MANAGEMENT COMMITMENT
- MISSION STATEMENT
- ETHICS CODE
- POLICIES/PROCEDURES
- TRAINING
- WHISTLE-BLOWERS HOTLINE
- ETHICS OFFICER
- INDEPENDENT AUDIT
- DISCIPLINARY ACTION
11Principles of Ethical Conduct
- Categorical Imperative
- Conventionalist Ethic
- Disclosure Rule
- Doctrine of the Mean
- Ends-Means Ethic
- Golden Rule
- Intuition Ethic
- Might-Equals-Right Ethic
- Organization Ethic
- Principle of Equal Freedom
- Proportionality Ethic
- Rights Ethic
- Theory of Justice
- Utilitarian Ethic
- Virtues and Character Development
12The Principle of Double Effect
- When both good and evil consequences result from
an action, it is ethical if three conditions are
met - 1. Good effects outweigh evil
- 2. Intentions are good
- 3. No better alternative exists
13The Rights Ethic
- REFERS TO ENTITLEMENTS THAT PEOPLE HAVE, FOR
EXAMPLE, TO LIFE, LIBERTY, SPEECH, HAPPINESS,
PRIVACY,RELIGION, FREE CONSCIENCE - CONFERRED AS NATURAL RIGHTS or
- CONFERRED AS CIVIL RIGHTS CONSTITUTIONS STATUTES
COMMON LAW - CORRELATED WITH DUTIES
- NOT ABSOLUTE
14Three Spheres of Justice
- Distributive Justice
- Laws and rules apply consistently
- Discrimination only for fair/relevant reasons
- Rewards proportionate to efforts and achievements
- Retributive Justice
- Fairly impose blame
- Punishment proportional to crime
- Compensatory Justice
15John Rawls Theory of Justice
- Each person is to have an equal right to the most
extensive basic liberty compatible with a similar
liberty for others. - Social and economic inequalities are to be
arranged so that they are both - Reasonably expected to be to everyones advantage
(and no action should be taken that does not
improve the lot of the least advantaged), and - Attached to positions and offices open to all
16Utilitarianism
- Obligation/duty is to perform the action that
will result in the greatest possible balance of
good over evil - Objections
- Hard to measure happiness or utility
- Confuses good of community with good of
individual(s) - Consequences cannot be predicted
- What is a benefit? What is a cost?
17Suggestions for Making Ethical Decisions
- Use Rational Terms
- Use Decision Making Tactics
- Set Ethical Priorities
- Commit Publicly
- Be a Role Model
- Act, Follow Through
- Develop Sympathy and Charity
- Others
18Valasquesz 7 Step Model
- What are relevant facts?
- What are ethical issues?
- Who are primary stakeholders?
- What are the possible alternatives?
- What are the ethics of the alternatives?
- What are the practical constraints?
- What actions should be taken?
19Valasquesz 7 Step Model (cont.)
- Ask 5 questions
- What are benefits and harms of each alternative
which leads to best overall consequences? - What moral rights do affected parties have
which action best respects those rights? - Which action treats all the same, except where
morally justifiable? - Which course advances the common good?
- Which course develops moral virtues?
20Why Ethical Decisions Are Difficult
- Facts do not dictate values
- Good and evil are interlocked
- Knowledge of consequences is limited
- Multiple stakeholders make competing claims
- Competing interests use incompatible ethical
arguments - Standards vary with time and place
- Humans are imperfect
- Current realities pose new novel conflicts
- Large organizations are ethically complex