Title: Practicing Ethical Behavior and Social Responsibility Chapter 2
1Practicing Ethical Behavior and Social
ResponsibilityChapter 2
2Social Responsibility
Ethical Behavior
3Corporate Fraud
- The new millennium has ushered in a wave of
fraud, investment scams, and ethical lapses
unprecedented in scope. Worse yet, such
corruption has cost thousands of employees their
jobs, clipped investor stock portfolios by
billions, and destroyed the faith of many in
Corporate America and its underlying securities
markets. - Adelphia. For 50 years, John Rigas, the founder
of the sixth largest U.S. cable company, lived
the American Dream. But he and his two
sonsTimothy and Michaelwere accused of
committing one of the largest frauds ever
perpetrated on investors and creditors. - WorldCom. This long-distance telecom giant
shocked investors when it revealed in 2002 that
it had engaged in one of the biggest frauds in
corporate history. The company admitted to
overstating cash flow by 3.9 billion by
reporting ordinary expenses as capital
expenditures. The accounting fraud allowed
WorldCom to post a 2001 profit of 1.4 billion
instead of reporting a loss for that year. - Ford and Firestone. Faulty Firestone tires on
Ford Explorers are blamed for 271 deaths and more
than 800 injuries worldwidenumbers that
investigators said could've been much lower if
both companies had reacted sooner to evidence of
product failure. Firestone blamed the problem on
Ford (and on Explorer drivers) Ford blamed the
problem on Firestone. Firestone refused to recall
the tires, then Ford stepped in and replaced the
tires on nearly 50,000 vehicles in 16 counties
outside the United Statesbut neither company
bothered to inform U.S. authorities or customers
until similar failures started to show up in this
country.
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5What Is Ethical Behavior?
6Unethical Behavior
Cheating on Expense Accounts
Misuse of Company Resources
Creative Accounting
Padding Invoices
Insider Trading
Conflicts of Interest
7Unethical Behavior
- Even legitimate companies can mislead investors
by withholding vital information. For example
Enron and WorldCom both showed that with a little
creative accounting, a business that is in
financial trouble can be made to look attractive,
even to government regulators and astute
investors. - Some business executives take advantage of the
investor by using the companys earnings or
resources for personal gain. Perhaps the most
common approach is to cheat on expense accounts. - Padding invoices and then splitting the
overcharge with the supplier is another common
ploy.
8Unethical Behavior
- Other tactics include selling company secrets to
competitors and using confidential, nonpublic
information gained from ones position in a
company to benefit from the purchase and sale of
stocks. Such insider trading is illegal and is
closely checked by the Securities and Exchange
Commission (SEC). - Another way that businesspeople can harm others
is by getting involved in a conflict of interest
situation. A conflict of interest exists when
choosing a course of action will benefit one
persons interests at the expense of another or
when an individual chooses a course of action
that advances his or her personal interests over
those of the employer.
9Ethical Business Behavior
Organizational Behavior
Influential Factors
Knowledge
Cultural Differences
10Promoting Ethical Behavior
- Top executives
- Written code
- Ethics training
- Ethics officer
- Reporting system
11Making Ethical Decisions
12Ethical Situations
13Social Responsibility in Business
Early 20th Century
Middle 20th Century
Early 21st Century
Maximize Profits
Provide Jobs and Pay Taxes
Balance Profits and Social Issues
14Percentage of Executives Who Strongly Agree or
Agree That Companies Should
Percentage
- Be environmentally responsible
- Be ethical in operations
- Earn profits
- Employ local residents
- Pay taxes
- Encourage and support employee volunteering
- Contribute money and leadership to charities
- Be involved in economic development
- Be involved in public education
- Involve community representatives in business
decisions - Target a portion of purchasing toward local
vendors - Help improve quality of life for low-income
populations
100 100 96 94 94 89 85 75 73 62 61 54
15Balancing Business and Stakeholders Rights
Business
Consumers
Employees
Investors
Society
Informed Purchase
Equity Health Safety
Profits Fair Disclosure
Clean Environment
Safe Products
Product Choice
16Efforts to Increase Social Responsibility
Social Audit
Philanthropy
Cause-Related Marketing
17Causes of Pollution
18Government Efforts to Reduce Pollution The
Environmental Protection Agency
Regulate Air and Water
Reduce Automobile Emissions
License Pesticides
Control Toxic Substances
Safeguard Drinking Water
19Business Effortsto Reduce Pollution
20Responsibility TowardConsumers
The Right to Safe Products
The Right to Be Informed
The Right to Choose
The Right to Be Heard
21Responsibility Toward Investors
Fair Profit Distribution
Ethical Behavior
Social Responsibility
22Responsibility TowardEmployees
Equal Employment Opportunity
Affirmative Action
Occupational Health and Safety
Americans with Disabilities Act
23Worldwide Ethics and Social Responsibility