learning objectives business ethics ethical theories corporate social responsibility guidelines for...
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Learning Objectives
• Business Ethics
• Ethical Theories
• Corporate Social Responsibility
• Guidelines for Ethical Decision Making
• Critical Thinking
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• Ethics is the study of how people should act
• Ethics also refers to the values and beliefs related to the nature of human conduct–Based on ethical standards or moral
orientation• Business ethics: business conduct that
seeks to balance the values of society with the goal of profitable operation
Business Ethics
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• Teleological ethical theories focus on the consequences of a decision
• Deontological ethical theories focus on decisions or actions alone
• Recognize that ethical values are as diverse as individual humans
Ethical Theories
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• Basic view: certain rights are fundamental
• Kantianism applies the categorical imperative: judge an action by applying it universally– Immanuel Kant
• Modern Rights Theories soften Kant’s absolute duty approach, yet protects fundamental rights (a strength of the theory)
• Criticism of the theory – it is ethnocentric
Rights Theory
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• Basic view: a society’s benefits and burdens should be allocated fairly among its members
• John Rawls argued for the:– Greatest Equal Liberty Principle – each person
has an equal right to basic rights and liberties– Difference Principle – inequalities acceptable only
if elimination would harm to the poorest class
• Criticism of the theory: equality is absolute
Justice Theory
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• Basic view: maximize utility for society as a whole by a cost-benefit analysis– Jeremy Bentham & Stuart Mill
• Strength of the theory is in the simplicity of a cost-benefit analysis
• Criticism of the theory: how does a person measure all the costs and benefits?
Utilitarianism
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• Basic view: maximize a company’s long-run profits within the limits of law– From economists Adam Smith, Milton
Friedman, and Thomas Sowell
– If legal, then ethical
• Strength of the theory is the focus on profits as a mechanism for creating social benefit
• Criticism of the theory: underlying assumptions may be flawed
Profit Maximization
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• Do corporations have a duty to society?
• This question has engendered ongoing debate for over a century
Corporate Social Responsibility
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• Many corporations have adopted a Code of Ethics to foster ethical behavior within a firm– And/or to enhance their public image
• Some laws, such as the Sarbanes-Oxley Act, have forced some firms to adopt codes of ethics for their executives– http://www.sec.gov/about/laws/soa2002.pdf
Corporate Social Responsibility
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• The business stakeholder standard of behavior determines whether an act is, or is not, ethical by examining the interests of various stakeholders with regard to a particular business action– supports efforts to engage in corporate
social responsibility
• Stakeholders are internal and external to the firm
Business Stakeholder Standard
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• Who and what are the business stakeholders for this college?
• What duties – if any – does a college owe to society?
Question for Discussion
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• To a decision whether:– To lay off employees to cut costs at the plant or
incur a significant decrease in profit– To use a less expensive component with a 15%
increased risk of defect or use a more expensive component with decreased profit
– To violate the environmental permit and pay the $25,000 fine or spend $50,000 to comply with the permit
Apply the Nine Factors
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• Ethical decision making requires critical thinking, or the ability to evaluate arguments logically, honestly, and objectively
• Learn to identify the fallacies in thinking
Thinking Critically
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• A non sequitur is a conclusion that does not follow from the facts – In other words, they miss the point
• Appeals to pity obtains support for an argument by focusing on a victim’s predicament– Often also a non sequitur!
Non Sequiturs & Appeals to Pity
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• A false analogy is arguing that since a set of facts are similar to another set of facts, the two are alike in other ways – Company X and Company Y are both large– Company X did activity 1, so Company Y
should also do activity 1
False Analogies
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• If a person assumes the thing the person is trying to prove, circular reasoning occurs– Example: we should tell the truth because lying
is wrong
• Argumentum ad populum is an emotional appeal to popular beliefs– The bandwagon fallacy is essentially the same
flaw in reasoning
Circular Reasoning & Argumentum ad Populum
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• Argumentum ad baculum is using threats or fear to support a position– Often occurs in unequal bargaining situation
• Argumentum ad hominem means “argument against the man” and attacks the person, not his or her reasoning
Argumentum ad Baculum & Argumentum ad Hominem
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• Argument from authority relies on an opinion because of the speaker’s status as an expert or position of authority rather than the quality of the speaker’s argument
• If a speaker observes two events and concludes there is a causal link between them when there is no such link, a false cause fallacy has occurred
Argument from Authority & False Cause
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• The gambler’s fallacy results from the mistaken belief that independent prior outcomes affect future outcomes– Example: the chances of getting heads when flipping
a coin do not improve with each flip
• If a speaker declares that something should be done a certain way because that is the way it has been done in the past, the speaker has made an appeal to tradition
The Gambler’s Fallacy &Appeals to Tradition
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• Reductio ad absurdum carries an argument to its logical end, but does not consider whether it is an inevitable or probable result– Often called the slippery slope fallacy
• Example: “Eating fast food causes weight gain. If you are overweight you will die of a heart attack. Fast food leads to heart attacks.”
Reductio ad Absurdum
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• The lure of the new argument is the opposite of appeals to tradition because the argument claims since something is new it must be better
• The sunk cost fallacy is an attempt to recover investments (time, money, etc.) by spending more– “Throwing good money after bad” behavior
Lure of the New & Sunk Cost Fallacies
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