The document discusses the responsibilities of a corporation to its employees. It outlines that a business exists to provide goods and services efficiently while also providing income and satisfaction to employees. When making transactions with employees, ethical considerations are important, especially regarding hiring, promotions, discipline, wages, and performance appraisals. Factors like fair treatment, qualifications, seniority, nepotism, due process, prevailing wages, and eliminating biases are discussed.
The document discusses the responsibilities of a corporation to its employees. It outlines that a business exists to provide goods and services efficiently while also providing income and satisfaction to employees. When making transactions with employees, ethical considerations are important, especially regarding hiring, promotions, discipline, wages, and performance appraisals. Factors like fair treatment, qualifications, seniority, nepotism, due process, prevailing wages, and eliminating biases are discussed.
The document discusses the responsibilities of a corporation to its employees. It outlines that a business exists to provide goods and services efficiently while also providing income and satisfaction to employees. When making transactions with employees, ethical considerations are important, especially regarding hiring, promotions, discipline, wages, and performance appraisals. Factors like fair treatment, qualifications, seniority, nepotism, due process, prevailing wages, and eliminating biases are discussed.
The document discusses the responsibilities of a corporation to its employees. It outlines that a business exists to provide goods and services efficiently while also providing income and satisfaction to employees. When making transactions with employees, ethical considerations are important, especially regarding hiring, promotions, discipline, wages, and performance appraisals. Factors like fair treatment, qualifications, seniority, nepotism, due process, prevailing wages, and eliminating biases are discussed.
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CHAPTER 3
RESPONSIBILITIES OF THE CORPORATION
A. PURPOSE OF THE BUSINESS FIRM • SOCIAL POINT OF VIEW - Firms exists to supply goods and services to consumers as efficiently as possible. • INDIVIDUAL PERSPECTIVE - The company exists to provide income, power, prestige, creative satisfaction, or a combination of these to those who work for it or with it. B. ETHICAL CONSIDERATIONS IN TRANSACTIONS WITH EMPLOYEES 1. Identifying ethical concerns in employee transactions - supervisors and managers are continually involved with employees and prospective employees. - They are responsible for numerous decisions that affect self- esteem, personal growth, morale and economic well-being of those that they manage. 2. Hiring - Employers hire people who will maximize the efficiency of the firm. - Employers must be careful to honor the moral ideal of fair treatment of employees. 2.1 Screening - When it is done properly, screening ensures a qualified pool of candidates and guarantees that everyone been dealt with fairly. 2.2 Selection - Job Description: lists all pertinent details about a job, including duties and responsibilities, working conditions, and physical requirements. - Job Specification: describes the qualifications an employee needs, such as skills, educational experience, appearance, and physical attributes. 2.3 Tests - Are designed to measure the applicant’s verbal, quantitative, and logical skills. • Aptitude Tests help determine job suitability. • Skills Tests measure the applicant’s proficiency in particular area like speed test in typing and shorthand • Personality Tests helps determine the applicant’s maturity and sociability. 2.4 Interviews 3. Promotions 3.1 Seniority: refers to longevity on a job or with a firm. - frequently, job transfers or promotions are made strictly by seniority; individuals with the most longevity automatically receive the promotions. But problems can occur with this promotion method. To illustrate: Personnel Manager Jerry Co needs to fill the job of quality control supervisor. Mina Malas seems better qualified for the job than Tim Plado, except in one: Plado’s been on the job for 3 years longer than Ms. Malas. If you were Mr. Co, whom are you going to promote as quality control supervisor. Supply your argument: 3.2 Inbreeding: all that we have said about seniority applies with equal force to inbreeding, which is the practice of promoting exclusively from within the company. 3.3 Nepotism: is the practice of showing favoritism to relatives and close friends. 4. Discipline and Discharge - For an organization to function in an orderly, efficient, and productive way, personnel departments establish guidelines for behavior based on such factors as appearance, punctuality, dependability, efficiency, and cooperation. DUE PROCESS – refers to the specific and systematic means workers have of appealing discipline and discharge. 5. Wages Ethical Guidelines for arriving at a salary 5.1 Prevailing wage in the industry – the salaries similar positions in the industry earn can provide some directions for arriving at a fair wage. 5.2 Community wage level – it recognizes that some communities have a higher cost of living than others. Ayala Alabang in Muntinlupa City for example is more expensive to live in than Moonwalk Village in Las Pinas City. The cost of living relates to basic maintenance needs and must be considered very seriously in establishing a wage. 5.3 Nature of the job itself 5.4 Job security 5.5 Employer’s financial capabilities 5.6 Mandated by law ETHICS AND PERFORMANCE APPRAISAL 1. Halo Effect: The individual’s performance is completely appraised on the basis of a perceived positive quality, feature or trait. 2. Horn Effect: The individual’s performance is completely appraised on the basis of a negative quality or feature perceived. office. He may be casual at work too!”. 3. First Impression (primacy effect): Raters form an overall impression about the ratee on the basis of some particular characteristics of the ratee identified by them. The identified qualities and features may not provide adequate base for appraisal. 4. Excessive Stiffness or Lenience: Depending upon the raters own standards, values and physical and mental makeup at the time of appraisal, ratees may be rated very strictly or leniently. 5.Central Tendency: Appraisers rate all employees as average performers. That is, it is an attitude to rate people as neither high nor low and follow the middle path.
6. Personal Biases: The way a supervisor feels about
each of the individuals working under him - whether he likes or dislikes them - as a tremendous effect on the rating of their performances. 7. Spillover Effect: The present performance is evaluated much on the basis of past performance. “The person who was a good performer in distant past is assured to be okay at present also”. 8. Recency Effect: Rating is influenced by the most recent behaviour ignoring the commonly demonstrated behaviours during the entire appraisal period.