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INTRODUCTION • Multinational managers face complex ethical issues • With an understanding of key ethical problems in multinational management, managers can make more informed ethical judgments BUSINESS ETHICS • Ethics - the rules and values that determine what goals and actions people follow when dealing with other human beings • Business ethics: all business decisions with ethical consequences INTERNATIONAL BUSINESS ETHICS • The unique ethical problems faced by managers conducting business operations across national boundaries SOCIAL RESPONSIBILITY • The responsibility businesses have to society beyond making profits • Often reflects the ethical values and decisions of the top management team • Ethics and social responsibilitynot easily distinguished in practice Excepts from Exhibit 4.1 show examples of ethical/social responsibility issues faced by MNCs Stakeholder Affected Customer Stockholders Employees Host Country Society in General Ethical/Social Responsibility Issue Example Problem For the MNC Product safety Should an MNC delete safety features to make a product more affordable for people in a poorer nation? Fair return on investment If a product is banned because it is unsafe in one country, should it be sold in country where it is not banned to maintain profit margins? Should an MNC use child Child Labor labor if it is legal in the country of their location? Should an MNC follow local Following Local laws that violate home Laws country laws against discrimination? Protection of the Environment Is an MNC obligated to control its hazardous waste to a degree higher than local laws require? ETHICAL PHILOSOPHY TRADITIONAL VIEWS • Two basic systems of ethical reasoning – Deontological – Teleological DEONTOLOGICAL THEORIES • Actions have a good or bad morality regardless of the outcomes they produce TELEOLOCIAL • Morality from the consequences of an act – utilitarianism MORAL LANGUAGES • Basic ways that people use to make ethical decisions and explain ethical choices – a contemporary view SIX BASIC ETHICAL LANGUAGES • • • • • • Virtue and vice Self control Maximize human welfare Avoiding harm Rights/duties Social contract NATIONAL DIFFERENCES • National culture and social institutions affect ethical behavior/social responsibility EX 4.2 INSTITUTIONAL AND CULTURAL EFFECTS ON BUSINESS ETHICS ISSUES AND MANAGEMENT KEY SOCIAL INSTITUTIONS Religion Laws and Legal System MANAGEMENT PRACTICES TO MONITOR AND CONTROL ETHICAL BEHAVIOR IN ORGANIZATIONS (e.g., codes of ethics) IMPORTANT ETHICAL ISSUES FOR BUSINESS (e.g., equal rights for women) CULTURAL NORMS AND VALUES (e.g., norms for gift giving) EX 4.3 ETHICAL ISSUES IDENTIFIED BY SENIOR U.S. AND EUROPEAN MANAGERS an y/ Au st U. ria K. Political and Local Involvement . Use of Information U. S G er m Personnel Issues -100 -50 0 50 Relative Frequency of Concern 0 = mean U .S . G er m an y/ A us U tr .K ia . EX 4.4 THE MANAGEMENT OF KEY ETHICAL ISSUES -15 -10 -5 0 5 Ethical Issues Addressed in Training Ethical Issues Addressed in Written Policies 0 = Mean EX 4.5 BELIEFS REGARDING ETHICAL CODES Violate if not Detected Define Limits Aid to Refuse Raise Ethical Level 0 French German 1 U.S. 2 3 5=Agree 3=Neutral 1=Disagree 4 FOREIGN CORRUPT PRACTICES ACT • Forbids U.S. companies to make or offer payments or gifts to foreign government officials to get or retain business – “Reason to know" provision • See Exhibit 4.7 • FCPA does not prohibit some forms of payments that may occur in international business – payments made under duress to avoid injury or violence are acceptable EFFECTS OF THE “ETHICS GAP” • FCPA and proliferation of ethical codes in US are creating and ethics gap • FCPA blocked some gains in export market share and FDI • Pressure on other countries to follow US rules TOWARD TRANSNATIONAL ETHICS ETHICAL CONVERGENCE • In spite of wide differences in cultures and social institutions, growing pressures for multinationals to follow same rules PRESSURES FOR ETHICAL CONVERGENCE • Growth of international trade – creates pressures for uniformity • Increased cross national imitation • Mixed cultural background employees PRESCRIPTIVE ETHICS FOR THE MULTINATIONAL • Donaldson suggests – guides based on the moral languages of avoiding harm, right/duties, and the social contract – specified in contracts and international laws INTERNATIONAL CODES OF CONDUCT • For moral language to work, there must be codes of conduct • Current codes exist based on codes from international governing bodies (UN, ILO) and international agreements (Exhibit 4.8) MULTINATIONALS DO NOT ALWAYS FOLLOW ETHICAL AGREEMENTS • • • • Governments make agreements Compliance voluntary Not all governments subscribe Each guide is an incomplete moral guide HOW SHOULD THE MANAGER DECIDE? ETHICAL RELATIVISM VS ETHICAL UNIVERSALISM • Ethical relativism - each society's view of ethics considered legitimate and ethical • Ethical universalism - basic moral principles transcend cultural/national boundaries PRACTICAL PROBLEMS OF FOLLOWING EITHER • Convenient relativism - companies use ethical relativism to behave any way they please • Cultural imperialism with ethical universalism BALANCING THE NEEDS OF THE COMPANY WITH ETHICAL CONSEQUENCES • Managers must weigh and balance the economic, legal, and ethical consequences of their decisions FORMS OF ANALYSES • Economic • Legal • Ethical IS THE BEHAVIOR OR ITS CONSEQUENCE: Violates Host or Home Country Laws? Legal Analysis Yes STOP! Yes STOP! No Violates MNC's Code of Conduct? No Organizational Ethical Analysis In Violation of the Company's Ethical Code? Yes STOP! No STOP! No STOP! No STOP! No Consistent with Company Culture? Yes Cultural Sensitivity Ethical Analysis Consistent with Local Cultural Norms? Yes Personal Ethical Analysis Do It! Yes Consistent with Personal Moral Beliefs? CONCLUSIONS • Multinational managers face ethical challenges magnified by the international context • Need to understand home ethical codes and impact on ethics of foreign culture/social institutions