Management Ethics and
Social Responsibility
MGMT 370
Chapter 5
Ethical Behavior
Ethics
The system of rules that governs the ordering
of values
Values
Terminal
Instrumental
Perspectives
Individualism
Utilitarianism
Moral-Rights
Justice
Telling the Truth and Lying:
Possible Outcomes
Personal Ethics
Most of us believe we are ethical but most
have unconscious biases that favor
ourselves and our own group
Managers often:
Hire people who are like them
Think they are immune to conflicts of interest
Take more credit than they deserve
Blame others when they deserve some blame
themselves
Is it ethical to:
Shop online during company time?
Using office equipment for personal use?
Read personal emails while at work?
Cultural Issues and Ethics
Dimensions of justice perceptions
Procedural
Distributive
Interactional
Cultural Relativism
Universalism
Ethical Imperialism
Ethical Systems
Moral
philosophy
Principles, rules, and values people use in
deciding what is right or wrong
Universalism
The ethical system stating that all people
should uphold certain values that society
needs to function.
Ethical Systems
Egoism
An ethical system defining acceptable
behavior as that which maximizes
consequences for the individual
Utilitarianism
An ethical system stating that the greatest
good for the greatest number should be the
overriding concern of decision makers.
Ethics Systems
Relativism
Philosophy that bases ethical behavior on the
opinions and behaviors of relevant other
people
Virtue ethics
Classification of people based on their level of
moral judgment.
Ethics Systems
Kohlbergs
model of cognitive
moral development
Perspective that what is moral comes
from what a mature person with good
moral character would deem right.
Ethics in the Workplace
Ethical
dilemmas
Rationalizing
Factors
Individual
Organization
External environment
Ethics in the Workplace
Ethical issue
Situation, problem, or opportunity in
which an individual must choose among
several actions that must be evaluated
as morally right or wrong
Business ethics
The moral principles and standards that
guide behavior in the world of business.
Dangerous Practice
Excessive emphasis on short-term
revenues over longer-term
considerations.
2. Failure to establish a written code of
ethics.
3. A desire for simple, quick fix
solutions to ethical problems.
4. An unwillingness to take an ethical
stand that may impose financial costs.
1.
Dangerous Practices
Consideration of ethics solely as a
legal issue or a public relations tool
6. Lack of clear procedures for handling
ethical problems.
7. Responding to the demands of
shareholders at the expense of other
constituencies
5.
Ethical Standards
Training
Whistleblowing
Modeling
Code of ethics
Moral management
Immoral
Amoral
Moral
Ethical Environment
Sarbanes-Oxley Act
Act passed into law by Congress in 2002
to establish strict accounting and
reporting rules in order to make senior
managers more accountable and to
improve and maintain investor
confidence
Ethics Programming
Compliance-based ethics programs
Company mechanisms typically designed by
corporate counsel to prevent, detect, and
punish legal violations.
Integrity-based ethics programs
Company mechanisms designed to instill in
people a personal responsibility for ethical
behavior
Ethical Issues in Business
Ethical Decision Making Model
Ethical Decision Making
Moral awareness
realizing the issue has ethical implications
Moral judgment
knowing what actions are morally defensible
Moral character
the strength and persistence to act in
accordance with your ethics despite the
challenges
Courage to be Ethical
Why might employees lack courage
in ethical issues?
A belief that the company would not take
corrective action
A fear that management would retaliate
against the employee for speaking up
Doubt that the employees report would be
kept confidential
Business Costs of Unethical
Activity
Corporate social responsibility
(CSR)
Obligation
toward society
assumed by business.
Corporate Social Responsibility
Economic responsibilities
Produce goods and services that society
wants at a price that perpetuates the business
and satisfies its obligations to investors.
Legal responsibilities
Obey local, state, federal, and relevant
international laws
Corporate Social Responsibility
Ethical responsibilities
Meeting other social expectations, not written
as law.
Philanthropic responsibilities
Additional behaviors and activities that society
finds desirable and that the values of the
business support.
Pyramid of Global Corporate Social
Responsibility and Performance
Contrasting Views
First - holds that managers act as
agents for shareholders and, as
such, are obligated to maximize the
present value of the firm
Second - managers should be
motivated by principled moral
reasoning
CSR as Competitive Advantage
Profit maximization and corporate social
responsibility used to be considered
antagonistic, leading to opposing policies;
the two views can converge
Recent attention has also been centered
on the potential competitive advantage
of socially responsible actions
Ecocentric management
Creation of sustainable economic
development and improvement of
quality of life worldwide for all
organizational stakeholders.
Ecocentric Management
Sustainable growth
Economic growth and development that meet
present needs without harming the needs of
future generations
Life-cycle analysis (LCA)
A process of analyzing all inputs and outputs,
though the entire cradle-to-grave life of a
product, to determine total environmental
impact