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Ethics and Social Responsibility

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Title: Ethics and Social Responsibility


1
Chapter 3
  • Ethics and Social Responsibility

2
What Would You Do?
  • PETA v. McDonalds
  • Should McDonalds assure that animals are treated
    humanely?
  • What ethical guidelines are relevant in this
    situation?

3
Learning ObjectivesEthics
After discussing this section you should be able
to
  • discuss how the nature of a management job
    creates the possibility for ethical abuses,
  • identify common kinds of workplace deviance,
  • describe the 1991 U.S. Sentencing Commission
    Guidelines and how its recommendations now make
    ethical behavior much more important for
    businesses.

4
Ethics and the Nature of Management Jobs
  • Ethical behavior follows accepted principles of
    right and wrong
  • Intentional managerial unethical behaviors
  • company resources for personal use
  • mishandling information
  • encouraging others unethical behavior

5
Ethics and the Nature of Management Jobs (Contd.)
  • Unintentional managerial unethical behavior
  • poorly constructed policies
  • unrealistic employee goals

6
Workplace Deviance
  • Behavior that violates organizational norms about
    right and wrong
  • Two dimensions
  • Degree of deviance
  • minor to serious
  • Target of deviant behavior
  • the organization or particular people

7
Types of Workplace Deviance
  • Production
  • Property
  • Political
  • Personal Aggression

8
Production Deviance
  • Hurts the quality and/or quantity of work
  • Such as leaving early, taking excessively long
    breaks, etc.

9
Property Deviance
  • Unethical behavior aimed at company property
  • Such as sabotage, stealing, damaging equipment,
    etc.

10
Political Deviance
  • Using ones influence to harm others in the
    company
  • Such as favoritism, spreading rumors, falsely
    blaming others, etc.

11
Personal Aggression
  • Hostile or aggressive behavior toward others
  • Such as sexual harassment, verbal abuse,
    threatening others, etc.

12
Workplace Deviance
ORGANIZATIONAL
  • Production Deviance
  • leaving early
  • excessive breaks
  • working slow
  • wasting resources
  • Property Deviance
  • sabotaging equipment
  • accepting kickbacks
  • lying about hours worked
  • stealing from the company

MINOR
SERIOUS
  • Personal Aggression
  • sexual harassment
  • verbal abuse
  • stealing from co-workers
  • endangering co-workers
  • Political Deviance
  • showing favoritism
  • gossiping about co-workers
  • blaming co-workers
  • competing nonbeneficially

INTERPERSONAL
Adapted from Exhibit 3.1
13
U.S. Sentencing Commission Guidelines
  • Companies can be prosecuted and punished even if
    management didnt know about the unethical
    behavior
  • Who, What, and Why
  • Determining Punishment

14
Who, What, and Why
  • Nearly all businesses - profit and nonprofit- are
    covered
  • Punishes a number of actions
  • Encourages businesses to be proactive on employee
    crime

15
Determining Punishment
  • Smaller fines for companies that are proactive
  • Steps in determining fine size
  • determine the base fine
  • compute a culpability score
  • multiply the base fine by the culpability score
  • Compliance programs are important

16
Compliance Program Steps for the 1991 U.S.
Sentencing Guidelines
  • Establish standards and procedures to meet the
    companys business needs.
  • Put upper-level managers in charge of the
    compliance program.
  • Dont delegate decision-making authority to
    employees who are likely to act illegally or
    unethically.
  • Use auditing, monitoring, and other methods to
    encourage employees to report violations.
  • Use company publications and training to inform
    employees about the companys compliance
    standards and procedures.
  • Enforce compliance standards by fairly and
    consistently disciplining violators.
  • After violations occur, find appropriate ways to
    improve the compliance program.

Adapted from Exhibit 3.2
17
Learning ObjectivesMaking Ethical Decisions
After discussing this section you should be able
to
  • describe what influences ethical decision making,
  • explain what practical steps managers can take to
    improve ethical decision making.

18
Influences on Ethical Decision Making
  • Ethical Intensity of the Decision
  • Moral Development of the Manager
  • Ethical Principles Used to Solve the Problem

19
Ethical Intensity of the Decision
  • Magnitude of consequences
  • Social consensus
  • Probability of effect
  • Temporal immediacy
  • Proximity of effect
  • Concentration of effect

20
Moral Development of the Manager
Preconventional Level Stage 1 Punishment
Obedience Stage2 Instrumental Exchange
Conventional Level Stage 3 Good Boy - Nice
Girl Stage 4 Law Order
Post Conventional Level Stage 5 Legal
Contract Stage 6 Universal Principle
Adapted from Exhibit 3.3
Davidson Worrell, Business Society 34 (1995)
171-196
21
Principles of Ethical Decision Making
  • Principle of Long-term Self-interest
  • Principle of Personal Virtue
  • Principle of Religious Injunctions
  • Principle of Government Requirements
  • Principle of Utilitarian Benefits
  • Principle of Individual Rights
  • Principle of Distributive Justice

22
Principle of Long-Term Self-Interest
  • People should never take any action that is not
    in their or their organizations long-term
    self-interest
  • The key is long-term, not short-term interests

23
Principle of Personal Virtue
  • People should never do anything that is not
    honest, open, and truthful, and which they would
    not be glad to see reported in the newspapers or
    on TV

24
Principle of Religious Injunctions
  • People should never take an action that is unkind
    or that harms a sense of community, such as the
    positive feelings that come from working together
    to accomplish a commonly accepted goal.

25
Principle of Government Requirements
  • The law represents the minimal moral standards of
    society
  • People should never take any action that violates
    the law.

26
Principle of Utilitarian Benefits
  • People should never take any action that does not
    result in greater good for society
  • People should do whatever creates the greatest
    good for the greatest number

27
Principle of Individual Rights
  • People should never take any action that
    infringes on others agreed-on rights

28
Principle of Distributive Justice
  • People should never take any action that harms
    the least among us in some way

29
Practical Steps to Ethical Decision Making
  • Selecting and Hiring Ethical Employees
  • Codes of Ethics
  • Ethics Training
  • Ethical Climate

30
Selecting and Hiring Ethical Employees
  • Increase ethical behaviors by hiring more ethical
    employees
  • Testing for ethics
  • Overt integrity tests
  • Personality-based integrity tests

31
What Really Works?
Workplace Deviance (Counterproductive Behaviors)
Overt Integrity Tests Workplace Deviance
10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80 90 100
82
Probability of success
Personality-Based Integrity Tests Workplace
Deviance
10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80 90 100
Probability of success
68
32
What Really Works? (Contd.)
Job Performance
Overt Integrity Tests Job Performance
10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80 90 100
Probability of success
69
Personality-Based Integrity Tests Job
Performance
10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80 90 100
Probability of success
70
33
What Really Works? (Contd.)
Theft
Overt Integrity Tests Job Performance
10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80 90 100
Probability of success
57
34
Codes of Ethics
  • Corporate statements on ethics
  • The relationship between codes and behavior
    depend on
  • companies communicating the codes to others both
    within and outside the company
  • companies developing practical ethical standards
    and procedures specific to the companys line of
    business

35
Ethics Training
  • Develop employee awareness about ethics
  • Achieve credibility with employees
  • Teach employees a practical model of ethical
    decision making

36
A Basic Model of Ethical Decision Making
Identify the problem
Identify the constituents
Diagnose the situation
Analyze your options
Make your choice
Act
Adapted from Exhibit 3.5
37
Managers act ethically
Managers are active in the ethics program
Ethical Climate
An effective reporting system
Fairly and consistently punish violators
38
Learning ObjectivesSocial Responsibility
After discussing this section you should be able
to explain
  1. to whom organizations are socially responsible,
  2. for what organizations are socially responsible,
  3. how organizations can choose to respond to
    societal demands for social responsibility,
  4. whether social responsibility hurts or helps an
    organizations economic performance.

39
To Whom Are Organizations Socially Responsible?
  • Shareholders
  • managers must satisfy the owners
  • social responsibility is maximizing shareholder
    wealth
  • Stakeholders
  • persons with a legitimate interest in the company
  • social responsibility is satisfying the interests
    of multiple stakeholders

40
Been There, Done That
Anita Roddick, founder and co-chair of The Body
Shop International PLC
  • Large multinational corporations are the cause of
    many social problems
  • Businesses should be audited socially
    environmentally
  • She is an activist against corporate corruption

41
Shareholders Only - Friedman
  • Managers cannot act effectively as moral agents
    for shareholders
  • Time, money, and attention diverted to social
    causes undermine market efficiency

42
Stakeholder View
special interests
Primary Stakeholders
media
Company
government
shareholders
suppliers
employees
Secondary Stakeholders
customers
43
For What Are Organizations Socially Responsible?
Legal Responsibilities
Discretionary Responsibilities
Economic Responsibilities
Ethical Responsibilities
Adapted from Exhibit 3.8
Carroll, Academy of Management Review 4 (1979)
497-505
44
Blast From The Past100 Years of Corporate
Philanthropy
  • 1800s - doctrine of ultra vires
  • Benefits to employees allowed in late 19th
    century
  • 1940s corporate philanthropy took place
  • Now, U.S. companies donate approximately 6
    billion a year

45
Responses to Demands for Social Responsibility
Reaction
Defense
Accommodation
Proaction
Do only what is required
Be Progressive
Lead the industry
Fight all the way
Public Relations Approach
Withdrawal
Legal Approach
Bargaining
Problem Solving
Do Nothing
Do Much
Adapted from Exhibit 3.9
Carroll, Academy of Management Review 4 (1979)
497-505
46
Social Responsibility and Economic Performance
  • Social responsibility can sometimes cost a
    company significantly if it chooses to be
    socially responsible
  • Sometimes it does pay to be socially responsible
  • While socially responsible behavior may be the
    right thing to do, it does not guarantee
    profitability

47
What Really Happened?
  • McDonalds formed the Animal Advisory Council
  • Developed Animal Welfare Guiding Principles
  • McDonalds changed their egg purchasing practices
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