Title: Institutionalising Ethics
1Institutionalising Ethics
2INSTITUTIONALISINGETHICS IN CORPORATIONS
- TWO BASIC RULES
- 1. Identify (and state) your rules of operation
clearly - 2. Avoid organisational hypocrisy
3UNDER THESE GENERAL RULES CAN BE GROUPED THE
FOLLOWING SPECIFIC RULES
- Leadership publicly committed to ethics in
actions as well as words. - Develop policies and procedures for addressing
unethical behaviour. - Develop a code of ethics and communicate it to
staff and public. Use it in decision making and
ethics training. - Institute an ethics office to field ethics
questions to monitor compliance with ethical
objectives and employee perceptions and to
recommend revision of the code, policies and
procedures.
4Institutionalising ethics 2
- 5. Adequately resource the ethics office.
- 6. Develop ethics training programs.
- 7. Reward ethical behaviour.
- 8. Punish unethical behaviour.
- 9. Do not place employees in competitive
positions where this can be avoided. - 10. Do not place individuals under avoidable
ethical strain group decisions are more likely
to be ethically safe and transparent than
individual ones.
5Implications for management
- Successful managers have
- Traits of the head - initiative,
co-operativeness, flexibility, and coolness under
pressure. - At the expense of
- Traits of the heart - honesty, friendliness,
compassion, generosity, and idealism. - Michael Maccoby
6Emotional detachment and moral disengagement
- Note the responses of NASA to Challenger, of
Union Carbide to Bhopal, of Exxon to the Exxon
Valdez disaster, of Bearings Bank to Nick
Leesons dealings, of Alan Bond to the Tooheys
hotel leaseholders, of Jodie Rich to One Tel, of
Jeffrey Skilling to investors, of Ray Williams to
HIH, of Gordon Gekko to the world
7Jackall quotes a manager in Moral Mazes
- What is right in the corporation is not what is
right in a mans home or in his church. What is
right in the corporation is what the guy above
you wants from you. Thats what morality is in
the corporation.
8Jackalls five rules of corporate morality
(survival)
- Dont go around your boss
- even if your boss invites dissent, tell him or
her what he or she wants to hear - if the boss wants something dropped, drop it
- anticipate the bosss wishes - dont force him or
her to act the boss - do not report what the boss does not want
reported, cover it up and remain silent.
9Goodpasters critique of goal fixation
- He calls the unbalanced pursuit of goals by an
individual or group teleopathy. This is - a suspension of on-line moral judgement as a
practical force in the life of an individual or
group. It substitutes for the call of conscience
the call of decision criteria from other sources
winning the game, achieving the goal, following
the rules laid down by some framework external to
ethical reflection.
10Roles again
- No licence to act unethically
- Roles add to responsibilities, they do not exempt
- Suggest that one is impersonating another like an
actor that the function of the role is what
matters and the occupant doesnt - Contribute to lost responsibility in organisations
11Consider the structure of roles in organisations
-
- Rather than ask What was going on with those
people to make them act that way?, we ask, What
was going on in that organization that made
people act that way? - James Waters
12Asking this does not relieve individuals of
responsibility
- This question moves the focus to the incentives
for good behaviour, the disincentives against bad
behaviour, and the culture of risk or safety,
retribution or support in which individuals and
teams act.
13A sick culture exhibits the following features
- 1. There is a "kill the messenger" ethos in the
organisation - justifies distortion and
concealment of information. - 2. There is a low degree of confidence in the
accuracy of internal reports. - 3. Despite claims to doing the right thing, in
the last analysis, top management does the most
expedient thing. - 4. Employees do not know of or refer to written
ethics policies . - 5. The operative value of the organisation is if
it's legal it's ethical. - 6. Top management's stated concern for ethics is
for public relations. - 7. Managers while basically truthful are willing
to deceive in order to accomplish organizational
or personal goals. - 8. Managers do not believe there is an obligation
to be candid where could harm personal or
organizational goals. - 9. People who ignore ethics but produce bottom
line results get promoted.
14How do you discover this?
- An ethics audit.
- An ethics audit is a survey of the members of an
organization to test their perceptions of the
health of its ethical culture. - Building an ethical culture begins with an audit
of the prevailing culture.
15Take Enrons culture, mirrored in its traders
- Goodpaster, item 5 - The operative value of the
organisation is if it's legal it's ethical. - If Californias deregulation was not
satisfactory, does that entitle Enron and its
traders to manipulate the market? Is this
ethical? - Does legal conduct somehow get transformed into
ethical conduct by circumstances? - Does the conduct of the traders show any
recognition of ethics or the humanity of others
or of any value beside power and its
manifestations?
16Reflect on the attitudes of the traders they
show a lot.
- Kevin So the rumours true? Theyre fuckin
takin all the money back from you guys? All
those money you guys stole from those poor
grandmothers in California? - Bob Yeah, grandma Millie, man. But shes the one
who couldnt figure out how to fuckin vote on
the butterfly ballot. - Kevin Yeah, now she wants her fuckin money back
for all the power youve charged right up -
jammed right up her ass for fuckin 250 a
megawatt hour. Laughter - These guys were beating up grandmothers, not
regulators, legislators or legal draftsmen.
17Hans Friedrich was in the SS
- He shot Jewish women and children. When asked
what he felt when he pulled the tigger, he
replied nothing. He just concentrated on the
job of aiming straight. - This attitude is a problem for anyone seized by
teleopathy, not just those whose goals are
intrinsically evil.
18Attending to the psychological contract
- When people join an organization they enter into
what has been called a "psychological contract" -
this is the unspoken set of agreements between
employees and the organisations that employ them.
- One writer has argued that "the psychological
contract may be the central determinant in
whether a person behaves ethically" (Sims 1991,
495). - Hence, the psychological contract can be a
licence for unethical conduct.
19Leadership
- Studies show that the single most important
factor in employees adhering to ethical standards
is example from the top. This is a more potent
than peer pressure, or background. - Managers ought to respond to problems identified
in an ethics audit by making public statements
about the organization's ethical commitments, the
ethos it is working to establish and its
expectations of employees.
20Leadership Means
- Identifying organisational values
- Leaders following these values themselves
- Promoting values to others
- Ensuring values reflected in all actions
decisions - Having the courage to insist on ethical conduct
21Leadership means
- authorising and empowering others to behave
ethically - modelling ethical behaviour and decision-making
- establishing practices which clearly demonstrate
a commitment to ethical values and behaviour
22Ethical Empowerment / Ethical Authorisation
Organisation
Top-Level (Department Head, CEO)
trust
responsibility
Next Level (Supervisors, Managers, )
responsibility
trust
Next Levels
responsibility
trust
23Leadership in industry
- If no one leads, no one follows and there will be
no change. - Mercedes Benz developed and patented the
passenger safety cell, but gave it away to other
manufacturers. - This is not inconsistent with Benzs culture of
product development and safety. - Contrast this with Fords development of the
Pinto and its attitude to safety issues in the
name of competition.
24The Pinto
- In 1968 Ford adopted plan for a subcompact on a
2x2x2 plan (2,000 pounds, 2,000 in 2 years). - In pre-launch tests, Ford discovered that rear
end collisions propelled the gas tank onto the
real axle and unless modified, the car always
caught fire. - Ford did not modify the Pinto. Why?
25Fords Cost/Benefit Analysis
- Ford applied a generic cost/benefit analysis to
all kinds of accident based on National Highway
Traffic Safety Administration estimates of the
worth of a human life around 200,00 and its
own figures on deaths from car accidents. The
analysis is as follows
26- Future productivity losses
- Direct 132,000
- Indirect 41,000
- Medical Costs - Hospital 700 Other 425
- Property Damages 1,500
- Insurance administration 4,700
- Legal and court expenses 3,000
- Employer losses 1,000
- Victim's pain and suffering 10,000
- Funeral 900
- Assets (lost consumption)5,000
- Miscellaneous accident costs 200
-
- Total per fatality 200,725
27- Benefits
- 180 burn death, 180 serious burn injuries, 2,100
burned vehicles - Unit cost 200,000 per death, 67,000 per
injury, 700 per vehicle - Total Benefit (180 x 200,000) (180 x 67,000)
(2,100 x 700) 49.5 mil. - Costs
- Sales 11 million cars, 1.5 million light trucks
- Unit cost 11 per car, 11 per truck
- Total cost 12.5 million x 11 137.5 million
28- On this analysis, Ford decided not to modify the
Pinto chassis. - In 1978 in Indiana, a Ford Pinto with three young
women aboard was struck in the rear and all three
burned to death. This was only one of a number of
such incidents, but Ford was indicted this time. - The judge instructed the jury that Ford would be
guilty of wrongful death if it could be shown to
have been indifferent to the dangers of the
Pinto. - Ford was acquitted.
29Moral analysis
- Did the end justify the means?
- Was Fords price of a human life defensible?
- Was Fords cost benefit analysis conducted
ethically?
30Law and regulation
- Lobby for a regulatory environment appropriate to
the times. A good company dont have to be
ethical alone and lose competitive advantage
because it is ethical. - Self-regulate and be firm about it. Codes are
only one form of this. Policies and procedures
complement ethical directives and exhortations.
31CODES
- Rule of law
- Common floor
- State fundamental values
- Can be codes of conduct or ethics or hybrid
- Must be used frequently to be effective
- Should be part of induction and development
- Must cover whole organisation
- Can be developed at top
32Code of Ethics Code of Conduct
- general
- values / principles
- judgment
- empowering
- aspirational
- specific
- prescriptions / directives
- uniformity
- enforceable statement of something specific
33Use examples
- Reward good behaviour and never punish it, even
if brings problems - Sherron Watkins Cynthia
Cooper. - Recognise good conduct and use it in staff
training. - Punish poor behaviour and never reward it, even
if it brings results - Enron. - Use examples of ethical failure in training, but
balance them with examples of excellence.
34An aid to clarityDecision models
- Do NOT make the decision for you
- Document the decision and the process
- Make plain what values are sacrificed
- Aid in moral reasoning
- Objectify moral reasoning and allow an example to
be set
35LAURA NASHS MODEL OF ETHICAL DECISION MAKING
- Have you defined the problem accurately?
- How would you define the problem if you stood on
the other side of the fence? - How did this situation occur in the first place?
- To whom and to what do you give your loyalty as
a person and as a member of the organisation? - What is your intention in making this decision?
366. How does this intention compare with the
probable results?7. Whom could your decision or
action injure?8. Can you discuss the problem
with the affected parties before you make your
decision?9. Are you confident that your position
will be as valid over a long period of time as it
seems now?10. Could you disclose without qualm
your decision or action to your boss, your CEO,
your family, society as a whole?11. What is the
symbolic potential of your action if understood?
If misunderstood?12. Under what conditions would
you allow exceptions to your stand?Laura Nash,
Ethics without the sermon, Harvard Business
Review, 59, 1981, 79-90.
37Summary of what is to be done
- Codes Leadership mentoring
- Ethics training Incentives and
disincentives - Ethics officers Hotlines
- Committees Ombudsman
- Newsletters Performance standards
- These all support a culture of ethical excellence
38Whistleblowing a last resort
- Public exposure of a danger to public interest
- Permitted when a serious issue is not addressed
within an organisation - Not internal
- Involves a betrayal of kinds
- Is a costly remedy
- Motives of whistleblower not central
- Difficult to legislate protection for
39External support for whistleblowing difficult
- Protected disclosures in Australasia have not
resulted in more than a handful of charges and no
successful prosecutions. - General distrust of whistleblowers despite
legislated protection. - Whistleblowers associations can be unhelpful.
40Criteria for legitimate whistleblowing
- There is an immediate and serious issue of public
concern.