Title: Business Ethics Fundamentals
1(No Transcript)
2Ethics and Behaviorin Organizations
Chapter 3
3Introduction
- Inventory of Ethical Issues in Business
- Employee-Employer Relations
- Employer-Employee Relations
- Company-Customer Relations
- Company-Shareholder Relations
- Company-Community/Public Interest
4Publics Opinion of Business Ethics
- Gallup Poll finds that only 17 percent to 20
percent of the public thought the business
ethics of executives to be very high or high - To understand public sentiment towards business
ethics, ask three questions - Has business ethics really deteriorated?
- Are the media reporting ethical problems more
frequently and vigorously? - Are practices that once were socially acceptable
no longer socially acceptable?
5Publics Opinion of Business Ethics
- Gallup opinion polls about ethical behavior (see
text book Figure 3.1) - Pharmacists ranked highest
- Car salespeople ranked lowest
- Business executives ranked near the middle
- People in the United States do not have a
positive view of ethics and behavior in
organizations
6Business Ethics What Does It Really Mean?
- Definitions
- Ethics involves a discipline that examines good
or bad practices within the context of a moral
duty - Moral conduct is behavior that is right or wrong
- Business ethics include practices and behaviors
that are good or bad
7Business Ethics What Does It Really Mean?
- Two Key Branches of Ethics
- Descriptive ethics involves describing,
characterizing and studying morality - What is
- Normative ethics involves supplying and
justifying moral systems - What should be
8Conventional Approach to Business Ethics
- Conventional approach to business ethics involves
a comparison of a decision or practice to
prevailing societal norms - Pitfall ethical relativism
- Decision or Practice Prevailing Norms
9Sources of Ethical Norms
10Ethics and the Law
- Law often represents an ethical minimum
- Ethics often represents a standard that exceeds
the legal minimum
Frequent Overlap
Ethics
Law
11Making Ethical Judgments
Behavior or act that has been committed
Prevailing norms of acceptability
compared with
Value judgments and perceptions of the observer
12Ethics, Economics, and Law
13Four Important Ethical Questions
- What is?
- What ought to be?
- How to we get from what is to what ought to be?
- What is our motivation for acting ethically?
143 Models of Management Ethics
- Immoral ManagementA style devoid of ethical
principles and active opposition to what is
ethical. - Moral ManagementConforms to high standards of
ethical behavior. - Amoral Management
- Intentional - does not consider ethical factors
- Unintentional - casual or careless about ethical
considerations in business
153 Models of Management Ethics
Three Types Of Management Ethics
Moral
Amoral
Immoral
16Three Approaches to Management Ethics
17Three Models of Management Morality and Emphasis
on CSR
18Making Moral Management Actionable
- Important Factors
- Senior management
- Ethics training
- Self-analysis
19Developing Moral Judgment
- External Sources of a Managers Values
- Religious values
- Philosophical values
- Cultural values
- Legal values
- Professional values
20Developing Moral Judgment
- Internal Sources of a Managers Values
- Respect for the authority structure
- Loyalty
- Conformity
- Performance
- Results
21Can Business Ethics Be Taught And Trained?
- Ethic courses should not
- Advocate a set of rules from a single perspective
- Not offer only one best solution to specific
ethical problems - Not promise superior or absolute ways of thinking
and behaving in situations
22Can Business Ethics Be Taught And Trained?
- Scholars argue that ethical training can add
value to the moral environment of a firm and to
relationships in the workplace by - Finding a match between employers and employees
values - Handling an unethical directive
- Coping with a performance system that encourages
unethical means
23Ethics-Moral Disengagement
- Social Learning Theory
- Moral reasoning translates to moral action
through self regulatory processes - You do things that bring you self-worth
- You avoid things that avoid self censure
- You have to disengage from your normal internal
self sanctions to commit unethical or deviant acts
24Moral Disengagement
- Scoring the questionnaire
- Moral justification-A
- Euphemistic language-B
- Displacement of responsibility-C
- Advantageous comparison-D
- Diffusion of responsibility-E
- Distorting consequences-F
- Attribution of blame-G
- Dehumanization-H
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26Chapter 3Ethics and Behaviorin Organizations
27Ethical andUnethical Behavior
- Ethical behavior is good, right, just, honorable,
and praiseworthy - Unethical behavior is wrong, reprehensible, or
fails to meet an obligation - Judgment of behavior is based on a specific moral
philosophy or ethical theory
28Ethical andUnethical Behavior (Cont.)
- Nagging issues
- Finding a standard of judgment with which all
reasonable people can agree - Defining the meaning of good, bad, right,
and wrong - Add the nasty issue of cross-cultural ethical
behavior
29Ethical and Unethical Behavior (Cont.)
Ethical dilemmas
Find 1 cent
Find 1
Find wallet with 1,000 and no identification.
Find wallet with 1,000 and identification.
30Legal Versus Ethical BehaviorThe Issue of Lying
Ethical behavior
Legal behavior
Lying to a customerabout the safety ofa product.
Testifying underoath in court.
How does myhair look?
Lying deliberate misrepresentation of the truth.
31Theories of Ethics
- Four major theories of ethics in the Western
world - Utilitarianism net benefits
- Rights entitlement
- Justice fairness
- Egoism self-interest
32Theories of Ethics (Cont.)
- Utilitarianism
- examine an actions effects to decide whether it
is morally correct - Action is morally right if the total net benefit
of the action exceeds the total net benefit of
any other action - Assumes a person can assess all costs and
benefits of an action
33Theories of Ethics (Cont.)
- Utilitarianism (cont.)
- Assessment of net benefits includes any important
indirect effects - Example assessing the effects of pollutant
discharge from a factory on the immediate
surrounding environment and those down stream or
down wind from the factory - Two forms act and rule
34Theories of Ethics (Cont.)
- Utilitarianism (cont.)
- Act utilitarianism asks a person to assess the
effects of all actions - Rejects the view that actions can be classified
as right or wrong in themselves - Example lying is ethical if it produces more
good than bad
35Theories of Ethics (Cont.)
- Utilitarianism (cont.)
- Rule utilitarianism asks a person to assess
actions according to a set of rules designed to
yield the greatest net benefit to all affected - Compares act to rules
- Does not accept an action as right if it
maximizes net benefits only once - Example lying is always wrong or thou shalt
not lie
36Theories of Ethics (Cont.)
- Utilitarianism (cont.)
- Two main limitations
- Hard to use in difficult to quantify situations
- Does not include rights and justice
- Other ethical theories meet these objections
37Theories of Ethics (Cont.)
- Rights
- Right a persons just claim or entitlement
- Focuses on the persons actions or the actions of
others toward the person - Legal rights defined by a system of laws
- Moral rights based on ethical standards
- Purpose let a person freely pursue certain
actions without interference from others
38Theories of Ethics (Cont.)
- Rights (cont.)
- Features
- Respect the rights of others
- Lets people act as equals
- Moral justification of a persons action
- Examples
- Legal right right to a fair trial in the United
States - Moral right right to due process within an
organization
39Theories of Ethics (Cont.)
- Rights (cont.)
- Rejects view of assessing the results of actions
- Expresses moral rights from individual's view,
not society's. Does not look to the number of
people who benefit from limiting another person's
rights - Example right to free speech in the United
States stands even if a person expresses a
dissenting view
40Theories of Ethics (Cont.)
- Rights (cont.)
- Types of rights
- Negative rights do not interfere with another
persons rights - Positive rights A person has a duty to help
others pursue their rights
Negative do not stop a person from
whistleblowing
Positive coworker helps another person
blowthe whistle on unethical actions
41Theories of Ethics (Cont.)
- Justice
- Looks at the balance of benefits and burdens
distributed among members of a group - Can result from the application of rules,
policies, or laws that apply to a society or a
group - Just results of actions override utilitarian
results - Rejects view that an injustice is acceptable if
others benefit the action
42Theories of Ethics (Cont.)
- Egoism
- Self-centered form of ethics
- Two forms of ethical egoism individual and
universal - Individual ethical egoism
- Judges actions only by their effects on ones
interests - Usually rejected by moral philosophers as a
defensible basis of ethics
43Theories of Ethics (Cont.)
- Egoism (cont.)
- Universal ethical egoism
- Can include the interests of others when
assessing ones actions - Still self-centered pursuing pleasure and
avoiding pain - Enlightened self-interest. Considers the
interests of others because the person wants
others to do the same toward him or her
44Theories of Ethics (Cont.)
- Egoism (cont.)
- Objections raised by moral philosophers
- Does not resolve conflicts in peoples interests
- One party would always have the pursuit of his or
her interests blocked
45Theories of Ethics (Cont.)
- Questions from the ethical theories
- Utilitarianism does the action yield the
greatest net benefits? - Rights does the action negatively affect
someones moral rights? - Justice does the action give a fair
distribution of costs and benefits among those
affected? - Egoism will the action lead to other people
behaving toward me in a way I would like?
46International Aspectsof Ethics
- Sharp contrasts exist between U.S. attitudes
toward business ethics and those of other
countries - Of the major capitalist nations, the United
States has the highest frequency of reporting
ethical violations, the toughest laws, and the
greatest prevalence of organization codes of
ethics
47International Aspectsof Ethics (Cont.)
Two ethical views
Culturalrelativism
Ethicalrealism
Multinationalorganization
48International Aspectsof Ethics (Cont.)
- Ethical views (cont.)
- Cultural relativism
- Cultural relativism refers to differences in
ethical values among different cultures - Premise right and wrong should be decided by
each society's predominant ethical values - Cultural relativists base their argument on three
points
49International Aspectsof Ethics (Cont.)
- Ethical views (cont.)
- Cultural relativism(cont.)
- Three points
- Moral judgments are statements of feelings and
opinions neither wrong nor right - Moral judgments are based on local ethical
systems cannot judge right or wrong across
cultures - Prudent approach do not claim an action is
either right or wrong
50International Aspectsof Ethics (Cont.)
- Ethical views (cont.)
- Cultural relativism(cont.)
- Managers should behave according to local ethical
systems, even if their behavior violates the
ethical systems of their home country - Many philosophers have rejected cultural
relativism's argument that codes of ethics cannot
cross national boundaries - Agree, however, that countries vary in what they
define as right and wrong
51International Aspectsof Ethics (Cont.)
- Ethical views (cont.)
- Ethical realism
- Morality does not apply to international
transactions - Because no power rules over international events,
people will not behave morally - Because others will not behave morally, one is
not morally required to behave ethically - See text for a revision to this view of ethical
realism
52International Aspectsof Ethics (Cont.)
- International ethical dilemmas
- Goods made in a country with no child labor laws
- Goods made in a country with child labor laws
that are not enforced - Changing the behavior of local people
- Making small payments that are allowed under the
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