Title: Chapter 7
1Chapter 7 8(3) Cases
- Justin Taylor
- King W. Lee
- Nadine Caffaro
2Chapter 7 Business Ethics
3Chapter 7 Overview
- Sources of ethical standards in business
- Ethical behavior in companies
- Methods of managing that promote sound ethical
decisions
4What are Business Ethics?
- Business Ethics study of good and evil, right
and wrong, just and unjust actions in business - Based on ethical traditions
- Honesty, protection of life, truth telling,
respect for rights, fairness, obedience to law
5Ethical Decisions Clear or Unclear?
- Lockheed Aircraft Corp
- Large campaign contributions to Japanese
Officials - Intent was to influence Japanese Government to
buy planes - Saved American workers jobs
- Violated U.S. business customs
- Clear or Unclear?
6Ethical Decisions Clear or Unclear?
- A. H. Robins Co.
- Market Dalkon Shield intrauterine device to
general practitioners - Competition sold devices only to obstetricians
gynocolgists - Robins gained huge market share
- Health problems arose, general practitioners slow
to take action - Clear or Unclear?
7Ethical Decisions Clear or Unclear?
- Managers commitment to worker
- Informs worker that replacement equipment will be
ordered from this years budget - At year end, equipment still not ordered
- There just wasnt enough money left to do it.
- Why was the commitment not kept?
- Clear or unclear?
8Two Theories of Business Ethics
- Theory of Amorality
- Theory of Moral Unity
9Theory of Amorality
- Business should be conducted without reference to
the full range of societys ethical ideals. - Managers act selfishly because the market
mechanism turns their actions into benefits for
stakeholders and society. - Justify unethical decisions at workplace, but
would consider that same decision unethical in
personal life - Reduces guilt
10Theory of Moral Unity
- One basic ethical standard exists behavior and
business decisions acted on basis of same
principles - Business actions are judged by the ethical
standards of society - Popular among todays managers
11Can Ethical Responsibility be Excused?
- YES!
- Aristotle Ethics involves making a choice
- Factors for excusing unethical behavior
- Ignorance
- Incapacity
- Unrealistic high cost
- No power to Influence an outcome
- No alternative exists
- External forces
12Sources of Ethical Values in Business
- Religion
- Philosophy
- Cultural experience
- Law
13Religion - Ethical Values in Business
- Despite doctrinal differences, religions agree on
ideas that form foundation of ethics in society - Promise-keeping, honesty, fairness, charity
- Golden Rule universal notion among religions
- Parables stories
- Christianity Bible
- Jewish Talmud Torah
14Philosophy - Ethical Values in Business
- Source of many notions about what is considered
right and wrong in business - Greek Roman philosophers
- Christian theology
- Enlightenment
- Idealist philosophers
- Utilitarianism
- Realist school of ethics
15Cultural Experience - Ethical Values in Business
- Culture fosters set of traditional values, rules,
standards - Stages of Civilization
- 1. Hunting gathering stage
- 2. Agricultural stage
- 3. Industrial stage
16Law - Ethical Values in Business
- Formalized through regulations, statutes, court
rulings - 1991 - U.S. Sentencing Commission
- Released guidelines for sentencing companies
- 3 Sanctions for illegal actions
- Fines
- Damages
- Prosecution
17Types of Sanctions for Illegal Action
- Fines intended to punish, deter future
lawbreaking - 2. Damages payments for harm as a result of
corporate actions - Compensatory damages payments awarded to
redress concrete losses suffered by injured
parties - Punitive damages payments greater than a
wronged partys actual losses, awarded to deter
similar action and punish a corporation - 3. Prosecution of Managers
18Business Ethics in Other Countries
- Environmental factors shape ethical values
- History
- Culture
- Philosophy
- Stage of Economic Development
- Underdeveloped vs. developed countries
- Government involvement
- Viewpoints about Ethical Variation
- Ethical universalism
- Ethical relativism
19Factors that Influence Managerial Ethics
- Leadership
- Strategy and Performance
- Corporate Culture
- Individual Characteristics
20Factors that Influence Managerial Ethics
- Leadership
- Most significant influence on ethical standards
in a company - Strategy Performance
- Create strong competitive strategies to meet
financial goals without compromising ethics - Pressure in downtimes
- Reward and compensation
21Factors that Influence Managerial Ethics
- 3. Corporate Culture
- Set of values, norms, rituals, and behaviors that
characterize a company - Lowered ethical climates in corporations
- Inability to raise and discuss ethical issues
between managers - 4. Individual Characteristics
- Behavior motivated by mix of internal disposition
and situational incentives
22How Corporations Manage Ethics
- Ethics Programs
- Application of management techniques designed to
instill values ethical behavior - Two types of Programs
- Compliance Orientation focus on laws
- Values Orientation focus on values
- Established as a result of scandal
- Caremark Case
237 Common Corporate Ethical Methods
- Establish corporate code of conduct that is
reasonably capable of reducing criminal acts. - Example GEs Code of Conduct
- Obey the applicable laws regulations governing
our business conduct worldwide. - Be honest fair, trustworthy in all your GE
activities relationships. - Strive to create a safe workplace and to protect
the environment.
24 7 Common Corporate Ethical Methods
- Assign responsibility for overseeing the program
to high-level personnel. - Board of Directors
-
- Exercise due care not to delegate substantial
discretionary authority to persons who are prone
to engage in criminal behavior. - 56 conducted new hire background checks
- 17 conducted background checks when employees
were put into highly sensitive positions -
257 Common Corporate Ethical Methods
- 4. Take steps to communicate standards and
procedures to all employees. - Training
- Facilitated in-house typically short hour long
sessions - Video, or web-based
- 5. Take reasonable steps to achieve compliance
with standards by using monitoring auditing
systems to detect lawbreaking by having in
place a reporting system that employees can use
to report criminal conduct. - Hotlines, statistical indicators, unusual
financial transactions
267 Common Corporate Ethical Methods
- 6. Consistently enforce standards using
appropriate disciplinary mechanisms. - Disciplinary methods
- Counseling, written reprimand, suspension, salary
reduction - Performance appraisals
- 7. Immediately after an offense has been
detected, respond appropriately and take
reasonable steps to prevent similar offenses. - Report crimes to law enforcement officials
27Business Ethics Conclusion
- Ethical values inherent in business, but forces
in markets corporations affect behavior - Business ethical dilemmas stem from conflict of
self-interest and fairness - Corporations can establish Ethics Programs
28Dow Corning and Implants
29Dow Corning and Implants
- Backgrounds
- Pioneered and developed Silicones material for
consumer products. - Identified a potential market for the Silicones
to be used as replacement for breast implants. - As a company, silicones was approved to be used
for human breast implant. Decision was made
based on the following - Food, Drug, Cosmetic Act o f 1938 DID NOT
required any clinical testing of any medical
devices. - By nature, silicones has anti-foaming properties.
Added to foods/drink for ingestion
30Dow Corning and Implants
- Business Decisions
- To re-gain market shares from competitors
silicones products - Estimated great market demand 50,000 per year
- Acted under the Survival of the Fittest theory
Either do something or will be forced out of
the market. - Developed (3) new silicones related implants
Gel-filled, Saline, and Double-lumen. - No formal testing/clinical data prior to products
launched - Ignore internal scientific warning on potential
risks
31Dow Corning and Implants Legal Problems
- Legal problems started when a jury award 7.3M
for punitive damages to breast implant patient. - This case opened doors to large class action suit
against Dow Corning on ground that Dow fails to
properly warn patient of the potential problems. - Lawsuits drove Dow Corning into Chapter 11
Bankruptcy. - Ultimately Dow Corning agreed to settle the class
action suit as part of Ch.11 Bankruptcy. - By settling Dow
- admits no wrong doing to the public
- Avoid enormous legal costs
- Remove themselves from any medical business
- Re-focus company resource to other areas.
32Dow Corning and Implants Medical Research
- Over 10,000 scientific studies were conducted
- found NO direct link between silicones implant
and any medical abnormalities. - No statistical significance
- Medical problems found were related to the
surgical procedures
33Dow Corning and Implants Conclusion
- Did Dow Corning acted socially responsibly to the
public? - Did Dow Corning break any legal laws and the
social contract? - If no, then why did they have to paid over 3.8
Billions in punitive damages? - What did they do wrong?
34Chapter Eight
- Making Ethical Decisions in Business
35Realtors in the Wilderness
Black Canyon, CO
36Principles of Ethical Conduct
- 14 Fundamental Guides or Rules of Behavior
- Some are universal tests of conduct
- Some are ideals
- Some are limited in reach and apply only in
certain spheres of human relations - All have strengths and weaknesses
37The Categorical Imperative
- Developed by Immanuel Kant
- Act only according to that maxim by which you
can at the same time will that it should become a
universal law - Strength This quick test of universability has
achieved popularity - Weakness Inflexible, to be applied in every
specific situation without exception
38The Conventionalist Ethic
- Popularized by Albert Z. Carr
- Business is analogous to a game, and special,
lower ethics are permissible - Managers can hold different ethical obligations
(personal and business oriented) - Similar to playing poker, managers are allowed to
bluff (lie) and to take advantage of all legal
opportunities and widespread practices
39The Disclosure Rule
- Managers should ask themselves how it would feel
to explain their decision to a wider audience - Others Test What would my manager, supervisor,
co-workers or family think? - Press Test If my decision is reported in the
media (TV, Newspaper) would I be proud of my
actions? - Strength - screens out base motives such as
jealousy and greed - Weakness doesnt give clear guidance on
dilemmas with strong arguments for several
alternatives
40The Doctrine of the Mean
- Developed by Aristotle (aka the golden mean)
- Right actions are found in the area between
extreme behaviors (excess and deficiency) - Find the ethical virtue at its core and seek the
mean of action. (Boastfull gt Truthfull gt
Understated) - Strength To observe the doctrine is simply to
act conservatively, never to the extreme - Weakness The moderate course between polar
extremes is open to interpretation
41The Ends Mean Ethic
- Often associated with Niccolo Machiavelli
- Worthwhile ends justify inefficient means When
ends are of overriding importance or virtue,
unscrupulous means may be employed to reach them - Weakness In solving ethical problems, means may
be as (or more) important than ends
42Golden Rule / Practical Imperative
- Golden Rule - Do unto others as you would have
them do unto you - Practical Imperative (Kant) Treat humanity
always as an end and never as a means only - Test of Reversibility A manager can comply with
either by determining if they would trade places
with the person affected by their decision - Weakness Peoples ethical values differ,
primarily a rule for interpersonal relations
43The Intuition Ethic
- Popularized by G.E. Moore
- Ethic holds that What is good is simply
Understood - People are endowed with a moral
sense by which they intuitively know the correct
solution to an ethical dilemma - Weaknesses Approach is subjective, no standard
of validation outside the individual, and tends
to be unpersuasive
44The Might Equals Right Ethic
- When faced with an ethical decision, people
should seize what advantage their strength will
allow - Not truly an ethic - can be invalidated by its
own foundation, physical force - Weaknesses Not a good approach for civilized
settings, invites retaliation censure, not
conductive to long-term advantage
45The Organization Ethic
- Implies that the wills and needs of individuals
are subordinate to the welfare of the
organization - Strength leads to cooperation and mutual trust
- Weakness creates an opportunity for the
suppression of free-will and the justification of
wrong-doing in the name of the organization
46The Principle of Equal Freedom
- Herbert Spencer (Social Statics - 1850)
- Every man may claim the fullest liberty to
exercise his faculites compatible with the
possession of like liberty by every other man. - A person has the right to freedom of action
unless that action deprives another of their
freedom - Weakness lacks a tie-breaker for situations in
which two rights conflict
47The Proportionality Ethic
- Managers are responsible for the consequences
when they create situations leading to both good
and evil effects - However, the principle allows them to risk
predictable, yet unwanted, harms if - The good effects outweigh the evil
- The managers intention is to achieve good
effects - There is no better alternative
48The Rights Ethic
- Because individuals have rights, other people
have a duty to respect those rights (often,
individual rights are given legal protection) - For example, a manager should not permit the
operation of unsafe machinery as all workers have
the right to a safe workplace (Safety and Health
Act) - Weakness - Rights are not absolute and their
limits may be hard to define (Many professions
require a certain amount of risk)
49The Theory of Justice
- Act in such a manner that the bonds of community
are maintained - Maintaining the community is important because
rights are best protected in a well kept society - John Rawls Veil of Ignorance Inequality only
for those that are most disadvantaged - Distributive Justice benefits and burdens of
corporate life are distributed impartially - Retributive Justice requires punishment be
evenhanded and proportionate to transgressions - Compensatory Justice fair compensation to
victims
50The Utilitarian Ethic
- Choices should be made so that the greatest good
is achieved for the greatest number - Decision makers should maximize pleasure and
minimize pain for not only themselves, but
everyone affected by their decision - Weaknesses
- The exact definition of the greatest good is
subjective and as a result, this ethic has led to
self interest reasoning and the rationalization
of social ills - Can lead to the abridgment of individual or
minority group rights
51Practical Suggestions for Making Ethical Decisions
- Think about ethics in rational terms such as
uni-versalizability, reversibility, utility
proportionality - Consider tactics such as
- Writing an essay advocating each alternative
- Seek advice from a more experienced person within
the organization to help reveal the companys
ethical climate - Use a pros cons approach for each alternative
- Critical questions approach - Lockheed Martin
- Are my Actions Legal?
- What would I tell my child to do?
- How will I feel about myself afterward?
- Am I being fair and honest?
- How would it look in the newspaper?
52Practical Decisions Contd
- Sort out ethical priorities in advance
- i.e, know that you value integrity over making a
sale - Be publically committed on ethical issues
- Public commitment encourages follow through /
assimilation - Set an example
- Ethical managers create an ethically responsible
climate - Thoughts must be translated into action, and
ethical deeds often require courage - Know that acting ethically can lead to personal
sacrifice - Cultivate sympathy and charity towards others
- Well intetioned people may differ on ethical
decisions
53Why Ethical Decisions are Difficult
- Managers confront a distinction between facts and
values when making an ethical decsion - Good Evil sometimes exist simultaneously, in
tandem and interlocked - Knowledge of consequences is limited
- The existance of multipe stakeholders exposes
managers to conflicting ethical claims - The ethical stand of a corporation is often based
on entirely different premisis from that of
critics - Some ethical standards are variable, they may
change with time and place - Even well intentioned managers can be mistaken in
their judgment or motivation - The effects of science and technology present
managers with new, unsettled ethical problems
54HCA Healthcare Company
55Health Care System Background/Situation
- Cost of health care was on the rise
- Medicare and Medicaid were initiated to cover
non-working citizens to slow down medical
costs. - Introduced the Billing Codes to further slow down
medical cost - Great intention.
- System was too complicated and have too many
down falls. - Private sector created HMO to offset/slow down
medical costs
56Health Care System Market Opportunity
- Richard Scott started Columbia/HCA
- Saw an opportunity in providing network of
medical services to patients. - Bought under-performing hospitals across the
country. - Implement cost cutting strategies to all the
hospitals - Ran the networks of hospitals like a
corporation - Implement short term profit goal
- Introduced revenue generating metrics to all
employee - Provide sales incentive goal
- Focus more on revenue than health care
- Over-bill the Medicare System.
57Health Care System Actions
- HCA was under intense federal investigation for
Medicare billing fraud - Federal jury indicted (3) Executives for
submitting false cost reports and claims - Over 35 HCA facilities were under federal
investigations - HCAs stock price dropped over 12.
- HCAs public image was compromise
- Richard Scott was asked to resign
58Health Care System Results
- New Era of HCA was born - under a new CEO (Thomas
Frist Jr.) - Started to change/improve HCA image company
mission statement/Vision - Focus on providing health care rather than profit
- Paid fines and admit no wrong doing
- The damage has been done by intense federal
investigations. - HCA is remembered as a scandal corporation
despite many positive achievements
59Health Care System Conclusion
- Was HCA a market driven corporation or were they
simply mismanaged? - Should Health Care be managed like a market
driven corporation? Or should it be managed by
the Federal government (Socialism)?
60Beech Nut Corporation
61Beech-Nut Corporation - Problem
- Produce and distribute 100 pure fruit juice baby
products. - Financial decision to switch supplier of the
apple juice concentrate 20 Price Reduction. - Concentrates are replicated with less expensive
substitutes - The adulteration of the concentrate violates
Beech-Nut labeling of 100 Fruit Juice - Problem was ignored by upper management.
- Continue to produce and distribute fake apple
concentrated juice.
62Beech-Nut Corporation - Actions
- External investigation found manufacturer of
adulterated apple juice concentrate guilty. - Investigation also found Beech-Nut was the
biggest user for the bogus apple juice
concentrate. - Beech-Nut refused to cooperate with the
investigation and acted irresponsibly by not
recalling products. - Beech-Nut destroyed evidence to avoid prosecution
- Beech-Nut continues to ship products while under
investigation.
63Beech-Nut Corporation - Result
- FDA found sufficient evidence to indict
executives of Beech-Nut on fraud and criminal
misconduct. - Beech-Nut pleaded guilty and was fined 2
Million. - Beech-Nut branding was tarnished and destroy the
public reputation - Stock price drop by over 20.
- Clearly the company was more concern with the
bottom line - PROFIT.
64Beech-Nut Corporation - Conclusion
- There were no evidence indicating adverse effect
in human ingesting adulterated AJ concentrate,
should Beech-Nut have changed their product to
apple flavored drink to avoid prosecution?