Ethics Values Chapter 1

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CHAPTER SUMMARY

Business ethics inquires into and justifies the decision-making process concerning what is right
and wrong in all areas of business practice. The decision-making process occurs on the
individual, organizational, and business system levels. This chapter explains how business
decisions are made from the moral, legal, and economic points of view. The strengths and
weaknesses of each perspective are reviewed before presenting an integrated approach that
applies all three points of view in the business decision-making process. The chapter further
discusses the relation between business ethics and economics, and between business ethics and
the law, as well as the place of ethics in management. Finally, the distinction between morality
(as a society’s view of behavior that is right or wrong) and ethics (as the philosophical study of
morality) is explained as a basis for the analysis and resolution of numerous issues in the
business world through the application of ethical theories.

Introduction
Ethical issues arise in relationships with every corporate constituency, including employees,
customers, suppliers, shareholders, and society at large. Rules of proper conduct that are utilized
in everyday life do not always resolve business questions, and problems arise when ethical
considerations conflict with practical business concerns. Each role in a business organization
involves unique responsibilities (such as the obligations of an employee to an employer or the
duties of management to the shareholders) that determine what a person should do. Business
activity takes place in large, impersonal organizations. Organizations are hierarchical systems of
functionally defined positions that are designed to achieve particular goals. People occupying
positions in organizations assume responsibilities that must be balanced with those of everyday
life.
Levels of Ethical Decision Making
Decision-making occurs on the individual, organizational, and business system levels. At the
individual level, a person decides what he or she will do. At the organizational level, decisions
involve an individual acting within his or her organizational role and are oſten expressed in
procedures and policies, whereas the business system level involves systemic problems that concern
industry practices and the economic system. These systemic problems require systemic solutions,
such as an industry-wide code of ethics, government regulation, or economic reform. Ethical
displacement (addressing a problem on a level other than the one on which it appears) is oſten
needed to resolve an ethical problem.
The Moral Point of View
Business decisions can be made from the moral, economic, and legal points of view. An
integrated approach to business decision making combines all three points of view. Four
morally relevant reasons for acting one way rather than another that constitute forms of
justification are:
1. Considering the benefit and harm to all of the di fferent parties involved.
2. Respecting the essential humanity of others.
3. Treating others with equality, fairness, and justice.
4. Caring for other persons in ways that nurture relationships.
The moral point of view uses reason or logic, not just feeling or conventional views, to justify
decisions. And it requires impartiality, meaning that the interests of everyone, including one’s
self, should be given equal weight. Morality by its nature is public in the sense that it is a shared
set of rules that are intended to be followed by everyone.

Criticisms of the moral point of view


Criticisms of the moral point of view are many. People discount or disregard the moral aspect of
business, arguing that the overriding consideration in business is profit maximization and
efficiency as expressed in the economic point of view. The legal perspective must also be
considered, but this approach is seen as a constraint on the economic position. Business, some
contend, is amoral, which is not to say that business is immoral but only that morality is not
relevant to business. Business has its own rules. Albert Carr argues that ethical conduct in
business is merely strategic behavior within the rules that government has set. Business strategy
aims solely at profits, but businesses reserve amicable relations and avoid dangerous hostilities
with employees and other groups out of a strategic concern for long-term profits.

An Integrated Approach
The author of our text, Boatright, suggests that the decision-making process in business should
include the moral, economic, and legal points of view. The tension among the three points can oſten
be resolved not through a tradeoff but through an ethically defensible decision that also satisfies a
company’s legal obligations and the economic demands of business. Business ethics attempts to
think clearly and deeply about ethical issues in business and to arrive at conclusions that are
supported by the strongest possible arguments. Philosophical ethics provides a set of concepts and
theories that form an essential foundation for the discussion and resolution of specific ethical issues
in business.

Ethics and Economics


Economics teaches that businesses should operate with only profit in mind. According to
economic theory, firms in a free market utilize scarce resources or factors of production (labor,
raw materials, and capital) in order to produce an output of goods and services, the demand for
which is determined by the preferences of individual consumers who are trying to maximize
their own satisfaction. Businesses try to increase production so that they receive from the sale of
goods and services an amount equal to that spent on materials, labor, and capital (marginal
revenues = marginal costs) and thereby achieve economic efficiency (maximum output for
minimum input). On this view, business decisions are made and ought to be made purely on
economic grounds, and ethics appears to have no place in business decision making.

Criticisms of the Economic point of view

1. The market system itself has an ethical justification. Adam Smith’s “invisible hand” argument
for a free market depends on the assumption that a system of exchange based on self-interest
will promote the public welfare. Thus, profit is not the ultimate end of business decision making
but only a means for achieving a greater good. Furthermore, the invisible hand argument only
justifies the pursuit of profit in exchange; it does not address ethical issues in production or
distribution.
2. Ethics is required by the market system. The theory underlying the economic point of view
already contains some ethical requirements, such as prohibitions against theſt, fraud, insider
trading, conflict of interest, and misappropriation of trade secrets. The economic theory also
assumes perfect competition and the internalization of costs, which are seldom the case. These

conditions are described by Milton Friedman as the “rules of the game,” with which businesses
are expected to comply in the pursuit of profit.

3. The “rules of the game” cannot be set by government alone. The economic arguments generally
assumes that the “rules of the game” are set by outside forces, most notably government. However,
it is unrealistic to expect that these forces are sufficient to set the “rules of the game,” in which
case
businesses should perhaps be expected to exercise some form of self-regulation.
4. Ethics influences economic behavior. Studies of economic behavior show that individuals and
firms do not act solely as rational utility maximizers but make decisions on the basis of such
factors as a reputation for trust and a sense of fairness. This is illustrated in the case on Home
Depot (Case 1.3). illustrated in the case on Home Depot (Case 1.3).
5. Public policy utilizes noneconomic values. Business decision making takes place within a
framework of public policy, which is guided, in part, by ethical values, such as fairness. For
example, a decision by a company such as Nike to contract with a supplier in Indonesia cannot be
purely economic; it must also consider possible charges of human rights violations and other
objectionable practices.

Ethics and the Law


Business decisions must also include the legal point of view because the law is a significant
influence on business activity. Some argue that law is the only moral standard necessary to follow.
But the law is not enough.

Why the law is not enough?


1.The law is inappropriate for regulating certain aspects of business activity. Certain behavior is
immoral but not illegal because legislatures and courts are reluctant to intervene in ordinary
business decisions unless significant rights or interests are at stake.
2. The law is slow and needs time to develop. The law develops in reaction to events and takes a
long time to respond, so that problems can cause much damage before they are effectively
addressed. Meanwhile, businesses have more information regarding their products and are thus
able to anticipate problems and react much more quickly.
3. The law includes moral concepts that are not precisely defined. The legal point of view
naturally overlaps with the moral point of view because the law uses general moral concepts,
such as good faith and reasonableness, whose application is oſten a matter of me, place, and
circumstance.
4. The law is unsettled and is not always applied literally. When the law is unsettled, the courts
oſten use moral considerations to decide cases, and the courts may also refuse to interpret the
law literally in order to avoid an immoral result. In appealing to morality, the courts are not
substituting morality for law but are expressing the morality embodied in the law.
5. The law is inefficient. Businesses that emphasize the legal point of view oſten invite legislation
and litigation where self-regulation could be more efficient.

Ethics and Management

Ethics in management is not merely applying the ethics of everyday life to business situations
because situations in business are oſten different from those in everyday life. In addition, the task
of a manager is not merely deciding what is right and wrong but also implementing ethics in
business situations. Furthermore, ethics in management is different because many of the rights
and obligations of managers arise from occupying a particular role. Many roles, such as that of a
purchasing agent, are precisely defined. Legal categories that exist for roles include: fiduciary,
agent, and professional. The duty of each is different, but in business they may well overlap.
Generally, a fiduciary is one whose relationship is based on a confidence or trust, and generally is
the highest legal responsibility one can have toward another. A fiduciary relationship always
includes the responsibilities of loyalty, care, and candor. An agent is one who acts in place of or
on behalf of another an agent may have a fiduciary responsibility to the person on whose behalf
the agent is acting, in other words, to the principal. A professional relationship is one involving
someone with a particular skill or level of education, who is deemed to be an expert in a certain
field. Examples of a professional relationship include a client toward a lawyer, an accountant, a
doctor, or an engineer.

Morality Vs Ethics
Moral (from the Latin moralitas) and ethical (from the Greek ethikos) have essentially
the same meaning: a description of human behavior as right or wrong, good or bad
that may be used interchangeably. However, subtle differences exist between morality
and ethics. Morality is the sociological phenomenon. Ethics or moral philosophy is the
philosophical study of morality. Ethics is a traditional area of philosophical inquiry along with
logic, epistemology, and metaphysics. It can be either descriptive, which is an empirical inquiry
into the rules or standards of a particular group, or it can be normative, which uses reasoning or
arguments to justify the rightness of a morality. In another sense of the word, ethics consists of the
rules and norms for specific kinds of conduct, such as the ethics of stockbrokers or the code
of ethics for accountants. Justification, or the determination of right and wrong, has been
challenged by two theses, namely cultural relativism and ethical relativism, which deny the
possibility of justification.

Individual Decision Making


Wrongdoing is often attributed to the proverbial “bad apple,” the individual who knows that an
action is wrong but deliberately does it anyway. Such persons can be condemned for having a
bad character, and the lesson for others is to develop a good character. Moreover, when
misconduct is widespread in an organization, as is often the case in major scandals, it is not
plausible to believe that dozens if not hundreds of people are all “bad apples.”
Some other explanations are needed, and fortunately psychologists and sociologists have
offered many.
First, many individuals work in environments in which they lack strong guidance and
receive conflicting signals. Often there is strong pressure to follow orders and get the job done.
Barbara Toffler, who chronicled the last days of Arthur Andersen in a book, relates the tale of an
undergraduate who interned at a major accounting firm where he was ordered to make an
accounting entry that appeared to be irregular. When he told his superior, “This doesn’t look
right to me. Why am I doing it?” the reply was, “You’re doing it because I told you to do it.”
Employees who are told, “Just do it!” without more explicit instructions and without adequate
resources may perceive these words as an implicit order to do whatever it takes to get a job done.
Employees are also urged to be “team players” and go along with whatever is being done. Senior
managers, in giving orders, often prefer not to give detailed guidance, in part to avoid operational
responsibility (“Just do it, and don’t tell me how you got it done”). They also sometimes lack an
appreciation of the operational difficulties of a job and thus leave to subordinates the task of
solving problems their own ways.
Second, individuals are prone to rationalization and can often effectively persuade themselves
that a course of action is morally right or, at least, is not wrong under the circumstances. Saul
Gellerman in the article “Why ‘Good’ Managers Make Bad Ethical Choices” identifies four
dangerous rationalizations.
• A belief that the activity is within reasonable ethical and legal limits—that is, that it is not
“really” illegal or immoral.
• A belief that the activity is in the individual’s or the corporation’s best interest—that the
individual would somehow be expected to undertake the activity.
• A belief that the activity is “safe” because it will never be found out or publicized; the
classic crime-and-punishment issue of discovery.
• A belief that because the activity helps the company, the company will condone it and even
protect the person who engages in it.

Third, psychologists have identified a number of features of human decision making that
produce errors of judgment. Two of these researchers contend that “unethical business prac-
tices may stem not from the traditionally assumed trade-off between ethics and profits or from
a callous disregard of other people’s interest or welfare, but from psychological tendencies that
foster poor decision making, both from an ethical and a rational perspective. Some of these
“psychological tendencies” are biases that shift our decisions in one direction or another, while
others are heuristics or rule-of-thumb methods that we employ in reasoning.
Conclusion
Business ethics is concerned with identifying and understanding the ethical issues that arise in
business and with developing the knowledge and skills needed by a practicing manager to
address these issues and to make sound business decisions—that is, decisions that are sound
from both an ethical and a business perspective. Ethical issues are an inevitable element of
business decision making and are deeply intertwined with managerial practice and economic
activity generally.
Business ethics is important for managers because the ethical issues examined here are involved
in many business decisions upon which the success of individual managers, business
organizations, and, indeed, the whole economic system depend. Both economics and law are
important guides for business decision making, but, as this chapter has shown, they are not
complete. Nor is business ethics understood merely as the treatment of ethical issues from a
philosophical perspective. As the work of psychologists and sociologists on organizational
misconduct show, it is not enough merely to determine a right course of action. Misconduct in
organizations is also the result of flaws in individual and organizational decision making that can
be corrected only by changes in decision-making processes. Although this text deals mainly with
the treatment of ethical issues in business, practicing managers must also address the larger
challenge of preventing misconduct within organizations.

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