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Transcript
THINKING AND MANAGING ETHICALLY
ETHICS AND BUSINESS
Dr. Keith Y.N. Ng
Ph.D., MBA, MCIM
TME 1
1
Business Ethics and Its Issues (1)
Baumhart’s (1968) Question:
“What does ethical mean to you?”
• 50% - what my feelings tell me is right
• 25% - defined it according to religious beliefs
• 18% - defined it as conformance to the golden rule
ALL OF WHICH PROVIDES INADEQUATE
FOUNDATIONS FOR JUDGING THE ETHICS OF
BUSINESS COMPANIES
© Dr Keith Y.N. Ng
TME 1
2
Business Ethics and Its Issues (2)
•
Dictionary Definition:
1. The principles of conduct governing an
individual or a group (e.g. personal
ethics or accounting ethics)
2. “The study of morality”
•
Standards of what is right and wrong, good and
evil (e.g. Case – Goodrich)
© Dr Keith Y.N. Ng
TME 1
3
Business Ethics and Its Issues (3)
Ethics and Morality are different:
•
•
Ethics – a kind of investigation and
includes both the activity of investigating
and the results of that investigation.
Morality is the subject matter that ethics
investigates.
© Dr Keith Y.N. Ng
TME 1
4
Morality (1)
• Case: B.F. Good rich – manufacturer of vehicle parts.
• Won a military contract to design, test and manufacture aircraft
brakes
• Specification of the brake given
• Vandivier, was given the responsibility to write a report on the test
runs
• The brakes did not comply with the specifications
• Superiors wanted him to falsify the test data and the reports.
• Vandiver agreed to co-operate due to personal and financial
commitments
© Dr Keith Y.N. Ng
TME 1
5
Morality (2)
Vandivier’s Beliefs
•
•
•
•
The right to tell the truth
Wrong to endanger lives of others
Integrity is good
Dishonesty is bad
© Dr Keith Y.N. Ng
TME 1
Moral
Standards
6
Morality (3)
Moral Standards
• The norms about the kinds of actions believed to be
morally right and wrong
• Values placed on the kinds of objects believed to be good
and bad (e.g. “always tell the truth”, “honesty is good”,
“injustice is bad”)
• Moral standards come from:–
–
–
–
–
Family
Friends
School
T.V.
Music
© Dr Keith Y.N. Ng
TME 1
7
Morality (4)
Nonmoral Standards
• Moral standards contrasted with standards we hold about
things that are not moral
• Examples of Nonmoral standards include:
– Standards of etiquette by which we judge manners as good or bad.
– Standards we call the law by which we judge legal right and
wrong.
– Standards of aesthetics – good or bad art.
– The athletic standards – how well a game is being played
© Dr Keith Y.N. Ng
TME 1
8
Morality (5)
5 Characteristics of Moral Standards
1.
Involved with serious injuries or benefits. Eg. theft, rape, murder,
child abuse, assault, fraud, slander.
2.
Not established by law or legislative. Moral standards rest on the
adequacy of the reasons that are taken to support and justify them.
3.
Should be preferred to other interests. Eg if a person has a moral
obligation to do something, then he or she is supposed to do it even
if this conflicts with other nonmoral values or self-interest. Eg.
Vandivier’s case
•
•
moral values of honesty and respect for lives
nonmoral values of keeping his well paid job
© Dr Keith Y.N. Ng
TME 1
9
Morality (6)
5 Characteristics of Moral Standards
4.
5.
Based on impartial considerations:
– Does not evaluate the interest of a particular individual or group
– “universal” standpoint in which everyone’s interests are
impartially counted as equal
Associated with special emotions and a special vocabulary
– Eg. If you act contrary to a moral standard, you will normally
feel guilty, ashamed, remorseful.
• You characterize yourself as ‘immoral’ or ‘wrong’
• Feel bad about yourself
• Experience loss of self-esteem
© Dr Keith Y.N. Ng
TME 1
10
Ethics
• Ethics is the discipline that examines one’s moral
standards or the moral standards of the society.
– how these standards apply to our lives
– whether the standards are reasonable or unreasonable
• Other fields, such as social science, also study
ethics
– Normative Study: attempts to reach normative conclusions
– Descriptive Study: attempts to describe or explain the world
without reaching conclusions.
© Dr Keith Y.N. Ng
TME 1
11
Business Ethics (1)
• A specialized study of right and wrong
applied to business policies, institutions and
behaviors
• How moral standards apply to social
systems and organizations that produce and
distribute goods and services.
© Dr Keith Y.N. Ng
TME 1
12
Business Ethics (2)
Three basic topics covered:
•
Systemic Issues
•
•
Corporate Issues
•
•
•
Raised questions about economic, political, legal or other social
systems within which business operate
Raised questions about a particular company
E.g. Goodrich’s decision to ‘qualify’ the brakes
Individual Issues
•
•
Questions about a particular individual within an organization, their
behavior and decisions
E.g. Vandivier’s decision in writing a report on the brake which he
believed to be false, was morally justified
© Dr Keith Y.N. Ng
TME 1
13
Applying Ethics to Corporations
Two differing Views:
• Corporations’/Companies’ Laws
• Mechanistic Nature of Corporations
© Dr Keith Y.N. Ng
TME 1
14
Globalisation, Multinationals & Business
Ethics
• Phenomenon rise of globalizations and number of
MNCs
• Ability to operate in several countries produces
new set of ethical dilemmas
– Able to escape environmental regulations and labour laws by
shifting to other countries
– Able to shift raw material, goods and capital to escape taxes
– Different moral codes and laws of countries e.g. child labor,
bribery
– transfer technologies or products into developing countries that are
not ready to assimilate them
© Dr Keith Y.N. Ng
TME 1
15
Business Ethics & Cultural Differences (1)
• Managers adopt the theory of ethical relativism in dealing
with different cultures with different moral standards
• Ethical Relativism
– A theory that there are no ethical standards that are absolutely true
and that apply or should be applied to the companies and people of
all societies.
– Relativism holds that something is right for the people or
companies in one particular society if it accords with their moral
standards and wrong for them if it violates their moral standards.
© Dr Keith Y.N. Ng
TME 1
16
Business Ethics & Cultural Differences (2)
– Numerous practices that are judged immoral by some societies that
other societies have deemed morally acceptable.
• Polygamy
• Abortion
• Infanticide
• Homosexuality
• Racial and sexual discrimination
• Families abandoning the aged to die in times of hardship
– Ethical relativism points out that there are no moral standards that
are binding on people everywhere.
© Dr Keith Y.N. Ng
TME 1
17
Business Ethics & Cultural Differences (3)
Criticisms of Ethical Relativism
• Illogical to assume answers to an ethical question are
equally correct – or either answer is correct
• Relativism is incoherent
– If ethical relativism were true then it would make little sense to
criticize the practices of other societies so long as their practices
conformed to their own standards
• Eg. we cannot cay that:– Child slavery is wrong
– Practice of apartheid in South Africa is wrong
– German’s treatment of Jews in the Nazi society of 1930s
was immoral
© Dr Keith Y.N. Ng
TME 1
18
Business Ethics & Cultural Differences (4)
Criticisms of Ethical Relativism
• Relativism privileges the current moral standards of a
society
– Moral standards of a society are the only criteria by
which actions in that society can be judged.
– The theory gives the moral standards of each society a
privileged place that is above all criticisms by members
of that society or by anymore else.
– A society’s moral standards cannot be mistaken.
© Dr Keith Y.N. Ng
TME 1
19
Moral Development & Moral Reasoning
What is it?
• Moral Development
– As people mature they change their values in very deep
and profound ways.
– Children’s adherence to moral standards is based on a
self-absorbed avoidance of pain.
– As we mature into adolescents, the moral standards are
gradually internalized.
– Adherence to moral standards are based on living up to
the expectation of family, friends and society.
© Dr Keith Y.N. Ng
TME 1
20
Moral Development (1)
What are the six basic stages of moral development?
• Psychologists Lawrence Kohlberg concluded that
there is a sequence of six identifiable stages in the
development of persons ability to deal with moral
issues.
• Kohlberg grouped these stages of moral
development into three levels, each containing two
stages.
© Dr Keith Y.N. Ng
TME 1
21
Moral Development (2)
Level 1 : Preconventional Stages
• Stage One : Punishment and Obedience
Orientation
– Physical consequences of an act wholly determine the
goodness or badness of an act.
– Child’s reason for doing the right thing are to avoid
punishment or defer to the superior physical power of
authorities.
– Child not aware of others needs and desires.
© Dr Keith Y.N. Ng
TME 1
22
Moral Development (3)
Level 1 : Preconventional Stages
• Stage Two : Instrumental and Relative Orientation
– Right actions become those that can serve as
instruments for satisfying the child’s own need or the
needs of those for whom the child cares.
– Child aware of others needs and desires.
© Dr Keith Y.N. Ng
TME 1
23
Moral Development (4)
Level 2: Conventional Stages
• Stage Three : Interpersonal Concordance
Orientation
– Good behaviour at this early conventional stage is
living to the expectations of those for whom one feels
loyalty, affection and trust such as family and friends.
– Doing right is motivated by the need to be seen as a
good performer.
© Dr Keith Y.N. Ng
TME 1
24
Moral Development (5)
Level 2: Conventional Stages
• Stage Four : Law and Order Orientation
– Right and wrong are determined by loyalty to one’s
own larger nation or surrounding society.
– Laws are to be upheld except where they conflict with
other fixed social duties.
© Dr Keith Y.N. Ng
TME 1
25
Moral Development (6)
Level 3 : Post Conventional, Autonomous, Or Principled
Stages
Stage Five : Social Contract Orientation
– The person becomes aware that people hold a variety of
conflicting personal views and opinions and
emphasizes fair ways of reaching consensus by
agreement, contract and due process.
© Dr Keith Y.N. Ng
TME 1
26
Moral Development (7)
Level 3 : Post Conventional, Autonomous, Or Principled
Stages
• Stage Six : Universal Ethical Principles
Orientation
– Right action comes to be defined in terms of moral
principles chosen because of their logical
comprehensiveness, universality and consistency
– The ethical principles are abstract general principles
dealing with justice, society’s welfare, equality of
human rights, respect for the dignity of individual
human beings.
– The person’s reasons for doing what is right are based
on a commitment to these moral principles.
© Dr Keith Y.N. Ng
TME 1
27
Moral Reasoning
• The process by which human behaviours, institutions or
policies are judged to be in accordance with or in violation
of moral standards.
• Moral reasoning involves two essential components:– an understanding of what reasonable moral standards require,
prohibit, value or condemn
– Evidence or information that shows that a particular person, policy,
institution or behaviour has the kind of features that these moral
standard require, prohibit, value, or condemn.
© Dr Keith Y.N. Ng
TME 1
28
Analysing Moral Reasoning
• Three criteria are used to evaluate the adequacy of
moral reasoning:
– Moral reasoning must be logical.
• Logic of the arguments used to establish a moral reasoning.
– Factual evidence cited in support of a person’s
judgment must be accurate, relevant and complete.
• Supported by statistics and scientific theory.
– Moral standards involved in a person’s moral reasoning
must be consistent.
© Dr Keith Y.N. Ng
TME 1
29
Arguments For & Against Business Ethics (1)
Objections to Bringing Ethics into Business
• The pursuit of profit will ensure maximum social benefit
– members of society will benefit most if managers do not impose
their own values on a business
• A manager’s most important obligation is to the company
– this argument justify a manager’s unethical or illegal conduct
• Business ethics is limited to obeying the law
– Laws and morality do not always coincide
– Laws do not involve serious matters
– Nothing to do with morality
© Dr Keith Y.N. Ng
TME 1
30
Arguments For & Against Business Ethics (2)
Arguments Supporting Ethics in Business
• Ethics applies to all human activities
– No reason to exempt business activity from ethical scrutiny
• Business cannot survive without ethics
– business activities cannot exist unless the people involved in the
business and its surrounding community adhere to some minimal
standards of ethics
• Eg. Lying, theft, cheating, distrust, conflict of self-interest
• Ethics is consistent with profit seeking
– Companies where a history of good ethics has existed side by side
: Intel, Timberland, HP, Cisco System, Levi Straus, P&G,
Starbucks Coffee
© Dr Keith Y.N. Ng
TME 1
31
Arguments For & Against Business Ethics (3)
Arguments Supporting Ethics in Business
• Prisoner’s dilemma argument
– a situation in which two parties are each faced with a choice
between two options : Either corporate with the other party or do
not corporate
• If everyone co-operates in following the rules of ethics - do not
steal, do not lie, do not injure, keep your promise, do not cheat
- all will be better off.
– Prisoner’s dilemma analysis of ethics has significant implication
for ethics in business
– Business interactions with employees, customers, suppliers and
creditors are repetitive and on ongoing
© Dr Keith Y.N. Ng
TME 1
32
Arguments For & Against Business Ethics (4)
Arguments Supporting Ethics in Business
• Customers and employees care about ethics
– most people value ethical behaviour and will punish those who
they perceive to be behaving unethically and reward those who are
perceived to be ethical
– customers will turn against a company if they perceive a gross
injustice in the way it conducts its business and will lower their
willingness to buy its products.
– Employees who feel their company’s decision making processes
are unjust will exhibit higher absenteeism, higher turnover, low
productivity and demand higher wages
© Dr Keith Y.N. Ng
TME 1
33
Moral Responsibility and Blame (1)
• Directed at determining whether a person or organisation is
morally responsible for an injury or doing wrong.
• Incurred only when a person or organisation acted
intentionally and so should be blamed, punished or forced
to pay restitution.
• Ignorance and Inability are two excusing condition that
eliminate moral responsibility.
– Exception clauses apply e.g. deliberately keeps oneself ignorant to
escape responsibility
– Law of the land
© Dr Keith Y.N. Ng
TME 1
34
Moral Responsibility and Blame (2)
• A person is morally responsible for an injury or a
wrong if:
– the person caused or helped cause it, or failed to prevent it when he
could and should have; and
– The person did so knowing what he or she was doing; and
– the person did so of his own free will
© Dr Keith Y.N. Ng
TME 1
35
Moral Responsibility and Blame (3)
• A person is NOT morally responsible for an injury or a
wrong if:
– the person did not cause or could not prevent the injury or wrong;
– The person did not know he was inflicting the injury or the wrong;
and
– the person did the wrong of his not inflict the injury of his own
free will
© Dr Keith Y.N. Ng
TME 1
36
Moral Responsibility and Blame (4)
• Three additional mitigating factors that diminish moral
responsibility
– Situations that leave a person uncertain (but not unsure) athe
person did not out what he/she is doing;
– Situations that make it difficult (but not impossible) for the person
to avoid or doing it; and
– Situations that minimise (but not remove) a person’s involvement
in an act
In general:
The more serious the injury, the less the mitigating factor
will diminish responsibility
© Dr Keith Y.N. Ng
TME 1
37