Title: Class: Business Law Bus. 02
1WELCOME!
- Class Business Law (Bus. 02)
- Instructor Carolyn Johnson
2Agenda
- Administration and Todays Agenda
- Chapter 2 Review
- Video - Business Ethics an oxymoron?
- Group Work Chapter 2
- Break
- K-W-L
- Chapter 3 Review
- Group Work Chapter 3
- Class Review
- Handout Review
- Assignment Review
- Journal and Student Feedback
- Preview
3BUSINESS LAW TODAY Essentials 8th Ed.Roger
LeRoy Miller - Institute for University Studies,
Arlington, TexasGaylord A. Jentz - University of
Texas at Austin, Emeritus
Ethics and Business Decision Making
Chapter 2
4Learning Objectives
- What is ethics? What is business ethics? Why is
business ethics important? - How can business leaders encourage their
companies to act ethically? - What are corporate compliance programs?
- How do duty based ethical standards differ from
outcome-based ethical standards? - What types of ethical issues might arise in the
context of international business transactions?
5Business Ethics
- Ethics is the study of right and wrong behavior
whether an action is fair, right or just. - In business, ethical decisions are the
application of moral and ethical principles to
the marketplace and workplace.
6Why is Business Ethics Important?
- Directors and Officers owe a complex set of
ethical duties to the company, shareholders,
customers, community, employees, and suppliers. - When these duties conflict, ethical dilemmas are
created.
7Importance of Ethical Leadership
- Importance of Ethical Leadership.
- CASE 2.1 In re the Exxon Valdez (2004).
- Creating Ethical Codes of Conduct.
- Costco.
- Clear Communications to Employees.
- Johnson and Johnson web-based ethical training.
- Corporate Compliance Programs ?
- Sarbanes-Oxley and Web-based reporting.
- Conflicts and Trade-Offs.
8Corporate Compliance
- A number of contexts, within the
employer-employee relationship, are fraught with
ethical considerations, such as - Having a system in place to detect, prevent,
eliminate, and punish behavior of a harassing
nature toward employees. - Avoiding wrongful discharge, either actual or
constructive. - Adhering to ethical principles during corporate
restructuring and downsizing.
9Companies That Defy the Rules
- Enrons Growth and Demise in a Nutshell.
- Merck Company A Brief History of Vioxx.
- Mercks awareness of the risks.
- Mercks choice.
10Business Ethics and the Law
- Legal compliance is the moral/ethical minimum.
- Simply obeying the law does not necessarily make
the business practice ethical. - Gray areas in the law.
- Business leaders must contemplate the ethical
implications of a business decision. - CASE 2.2 Guin v. Brazos Higher Education
Service Corp. (2006).
11Approaches to Ethical Reasoning
- Duty Based Ethics - derived from religious and
philosophical principles. - Religious Ethical Standards.
- Kantian Ethics.
- Rights Principles.
- Outcome-Based Ethics - seek to ensure a given
outcome. - Utilitarianism.
12Corporate Social Responsibility
- Profit Maximization a corporation exists to use
its resources to increase its profits, within the
bounds of the law. - Stakeholder Approach. Corporate actions affect
others. - Corporate Citizenship. Corporations should be
good citizens. - Maximum vs. Optimum Profits.
- CASE 2.3 Fog Cutter Capital Group Inc. v.
Securities Exchange Commission (2007).
13Business Ethics on a Global Level
- American companies must be trained in
cross-cultural business practices. - Monitoring the Employment Practices of Foreign
Suppliers. - Corporate Watch groups can disseminate
information instantly around world. - Foreign Corrupt Practices Act.
- Bribes and Accounting Practices.
14Learning Objectives
- What is ethics? What is business ethics? Why is
business ethics important? - How can business leaders encourage their
companies to act ethically? - What are corporate compliance programs?
- How do duty based ethical standards differ from
outcome-based ethical standards? - What types of ethical issues might arise in the
context of international business transactions?
15Group Work
- Sucks SitesCan They Be Shut Down?
- Give examples of your own ethical standards and
explain how you arrived at those standards. - If there is a conflict between a law and an
ethic, should an individual disobey the law, or
should an individual obey the law even if he or
she thinks it would be unethical to do so? Is
there a higher law than what society provides in
a particular place at a particular time?
16Group Work
- Would you, as owners of a business, offer a
prospective employee a lower salary if (1) the
employee indicated during the interview that she
expected a lower salary than they had been
prepared to offer based on other companies
salaries for similar positions? (2) paying the
lower salary would violate no law? (3) the
position was unique within the company (so that
there were not other employees with whom she
could compare pay)? - Should ethical standards be adapted to deal with
the new forms of social disruption made possible
by the Internet (for example, data theft,
hacking, virus implanting, and invasion of
privacy)? What new ethical standards, if any,
are needed to resolve problems online?