Title: CORPORATE ETHICAL RESPONSIBILITY
1CORPORATE ETHICAL RESPONSIBILITY
CPD Lecture Series
- Achieving and maintaining professionalism
Niall Gallagher Galway 21 October 2009
Disclaimer The Insurance Institute of Ireland
does not endorse or approve the content of any
third party.
2Themes of the presentation
- What is Corporate Responsibility?
- What has it do with Ethics?
- Is there a problem and has it to do with Trust?
- What builds trust and what undermines it
- Why we need to rethink values in finance
- Does Corporate Social Responsibility contribute?
- What has Corporate Governance to do with Ethics?
- Leadership - establishing and maintaining ethical
values -
3What is Corporate Responsibility?
- Sustainability long term growth and
profitability - Serving customers and treating them fairly
- Providing fair employment and respecting the
individual - Obeying the law and regulations
- Contributing to society
- Doing no harm
- Corporate Social Responsibility
- Companies meaning (or seeming) to be good
- (The Economist 19 January 2008)
4What do we mean by Corporate Ethical
Responsibility?
- Ethics is the study of the moral value of human
conduct and the rules and principles that ought
to govern it - Ethics in business is the study of individual or
corporate behaviour with special attention to
moral adequacy - Ethics is, by its nature, obedience to the
unenforceable and the ultimate guarantor of
trust. - Corporate Responsibility without ethics is a sham
-
5Where personal ethics, business ethics and CSR
meet
- Personal Ethics
- Business Ethics (Ethics in Business)
- Social Ethics Corporate Social Responsibility
Personal
Social
Business
Social
6Where ethics and sport meet
- The material released yesterday 25th August
2009 makes claims of bullying and intimidation,
deceit, connivance, sweeteners, hush-hush offers
and a complete disregard for the supposed ethos
of the game. Honesty is for wimps. Integrity is
for losers. Winning is all that matters
emphasis added - (Mick Cleary, Rugby Union Correspondent, Daily
Telegraph, 26th August 2009 referring to the
Bloodgate affair)
7Where do we stand in relation to Corporate
Ethical Responsibility?
- Is there a problem?
- If so who is responsible?
- What can be done about it?
- Does it pay?
- What is the role of the Professions in building
trust? - What is the ideal state of Corporate Ethical
Responsibility?
8Corporate Ethical Responsibility
9 Is there a problem?
- Yes
- Trust has gone missing
10Is there a problem? Yes Trust has gone
missing
- Trust is like oxygen vital to human flourishing
and unnoticed until it goes missing - Papering Over the Cracks Rules, Regulation
and Real Trust Smith and Reeves, The Work
Foundation (2006) - Capitalism is a system that functions on trust
- Financial Times - 30 June 2003.
-
11Trust in various professions Note this is a UK
survey does it apply in Ireland?
Q. For each (profession) which would you
generally trust to tell the truth? Responses .
Source Ipsos MORI Survey (UK) November
2008
12Financial Services and trust
- Trust is the cornerstone of confidence in the
financial services sector, and confidence is
fragile - Consumers must trust the providers
- Firms must have trustworthy employees and
directors - Regulators must trust the providers and be
trusted by the consumers - You cannot legislate for trust
- Trust / Integrity / are Ethical Values.
13 Is there a problem?
- Yes
- Trust has gone missing
- So, where did we go wrong?
14What leads to lack of trust?
- Weak governance and controls/checks and balances
- Short-term horizons
- Inappropriate incentives
- Unchallenging internal culture
- Conflicts of interest
- Failure to understand the business and why it
exists - Hubris n.1. pride or arrogance (in Greek
tragedy) an excess of pride, ambition etc.
ultimately causing the transgressors ruin
15What are the consequences?
- Damaged reputation business/industry/individual
- High-cost internal control necessary
- Dysfunctional corporate culture
- Heavy hand of external regulation
- Loss of customer and consumer confidence
- Business failure
- Economic consequences
16What builds trust?
- principled leadership
- prudence
- freedom to speak up and challenge
- Intelligent accountability
- honest communication and disclosure
- Consistency (word and deed)
- Meeting commitments
- Professional standards
- Corporate Ethical Responsibility
17What builds trust regulation/rules or
principles/ethics?
- Fincial regulation is a mix between rules and
principles - Irish and UK Regulators favoured principles-based
regulation - US Regulators favoured rules-based, and law.
- Who has been proved right?
- A principles based approach does not work with
participants who have no principles Hector
Sants, CEO, FSA. March 2009
18Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR)
- Examples
- Sustainability (the capacity to endure)
- Environment and conservation
- Welfare and community activity
- Ethical investment
- Business leadership in promoting society values
- International responsibility Fairtrade/human
rights - CSR builds trust if it is consistent with
business strategy and brand and is it authentic-
not just PR and spin? - CSR is (or should be) voluntary action
19Reputation is a consequence of corporate ethics
- Reputation is critical to long term/sustainable
performance (and derives from it) - Reputation is based on trust without trust.
- Good reputation contributes to superior
performance (and brand value) - People greatly value their personal reputation
(integrity)
20Does Corporate Ethical Responsibility pay?
- Difficult to measure consider the opposite
does crime pay? - Good ethics is good business intuitively
correct Jim Collins Good to Great (Harper
Business, 2005) - Research by Institute of Business Ethics (IBE),
Does Ethics Pay? (2003, and 2007 Revisited)
says YES . Ethics training is a key factor. - Strong evidence of link between good corporate
governance and good performance. - Weak but positive links between companies social
and financial performance The Economist January
2008
21What can we do about it? Who is responsible?
- Personal to act with integrity
- Management to set the tone from the top lead
by example and manage the ethical agenda. - Board to balance stakeholder demands and
establish appropriate governance (including
rewards and incentives) - Professional bodies to educate, promote and
enforce high ethical standards - Regulators to regulate cost-effectively and to
serve the public interest - Government to govern responsibly, legislate
effectively and police fairly the public
interest.
22 What is the role of the Professions?
- What defines a profession?
- Formal education and training with examinations
high degree of intellectual difficulty - A concern with Ethics, usually with Codes of
Conduct (Ethics) with enforcement procedures
high degree of responsibility. - The pursuit of excellence in practice high
standards of professionalism - How do we measure up as professionals?
23 Corporate Ethical Responsibility
- Where does ethics fit in the business?
- in its submission to the regulator?
- In the 5 year plan?
- On the website?
- In the adverts?
- In the book the code of ethics?
- In the mind of the MD?
- In the job description of the Director of
Communication? - In the Compliance department?
- In all of the above?
24Ethics fits at the heart of business
decision-making
Society and the Environment
Legal and regulatory framework
Business
activity
CSR Voluntary Codes
Corporate Governance Regulatory
Compliance
Ethics and values
25 - What would an ethically responsible company look
like?
26 - What would an ethically responsible bank look
like?
27 What would an ethically responsible bank look
like?
- You money is safe.
- You can trust us
- Our values are our most important asset
28 - The bottom line on
- Corporate Ethical Responsibility?
29What is the bottom line on Corporate Ethical
Responsibility?
- Companies must earn the trust of their
stakeholders through ethical leadership in action - Building and retaining trust requires a
relentless focus on values - Ethical considerations must be at the heart of
business decision-making - Corporate ethical responsibility pays -long-term
30USEFUL REFERENCES
- An Introduction to Business Ethics, Chryssides
Kaler , - International Thompson Business
Press (1993) - Ethicability Roger Steare Roger Steare
Consultancy Ltd., (2006) - Creating the Good Life, James OToole, Rodale
International Ltd., (2005) - Good to Great Jim Collins Harper Business
(2001) - Value Shift., Lynn Sharp Paine, McGraw Hill
(2003) - Just good business A special report on
Corporate Social Responsibility - The Economist (19th January 2008)
- Papering Over The Cracks? Rules Regulation and
Real Trust The Work Foundation, - Ed Smith Richard Reeves. (February 2006)
- All you need to know about Ethics and Finance,
John Plender and Avinish D. Persaud, - Longtail Publishing Limited (2007)
- Business Ethics and Values, Colin Fisher and
Alan Lovell, FT Prentice Hall, 2nd Ed. (2006) - Virtuous Leadership An agenda for personal
Excelence , Alexandre Havard, Scepter - Publishers inc. (2007)
- Good Value Reflections on money, morality and
an uncertain world Stephen Green, Penguin Books
(2009) - A Short History of Ethics, Alasdair MacIntyre,
Macmillan Publishing Company (1966)
31USEFUL WEBSITES
- Institute of Business Ethics www.ibe.org
- Business in the Community www.bitc.ie
- ACCA (includes Ireland news) WWW.
ACCAGLOBAL.COM - Institute of Chartered Accountants in England
Wales www.iceaw.com/bettermarkets - Hermes Pension Management Ltd www.hermes.com
- Dow Jones Sustainability Index
www.sustainability-indexes.com - FTSE4 GOOD Index www.ftse4good.com
- Ethical Research Services www.eiris.org
- Ethics Resource Centre www.ethics.org
- Wikipedia www.wikipedia.org/wiki/business_ethics
- Spitzer Centre for Ethical Leadership www.
spitzercentre.org
32Corporate Ethical Responsibility?
-
- Discussion
- And
- Your views
33CORPORATE ETHICAL RESPONSIBILITY
CPD Lecture Series
- Achieving and maintaining professionalism
Niall Gallagher Galway 21 October 2009