What is morality? What is ethics?
Morality: social practices defining right or wrong transmitted within cultures and institutions
Ethical theory and moral philosophy: reflection on the nature and justification of right actions introducing clarity, substance, and precision of argument
Behavioral business ethics: understanding why individuals, groups, and organizations behave in certain ways
Business ethics and the law
Eigene Notizen:
Legal but unethical: for example working in military companies
Illegal but ethical: getting food from containers
Mc Donald’s deceptive advertising legal but unethical?
—> it is not always clear
Business ethics & values
Business Ethics: study of business situations, activities and decisions where issues of MORALLY right or wrong are addressed (Crane and Matten, 2008)
Values: desirable, trans-situational goals, varying in importance, that serve as guiding principles in people’s lives (Schwartz, 1996)
Examples of Values
Corporate Social Responsibility: a first definition
= the responsibility of enterprises for their impacts on society
EU Comission (2011)
Respect for applicable legislation, and for collective agreements between social partners, is a prerequisite for meeting that responsibility.
To fully meet their corporate social responsibility, enterprises should have in place a process to integrate social, environmental, ethical, human rights and consumer concerns into their business operations and core strategy in close collaboration with their stakeholders, with the aim of
identifying, preventing and mitigating their possible adverse impacts
maximizing the creation of shared value for their owners/shareholders and for their other stakeholders and society at large
Who are company’s stakeholders?
4 C und REGIMES
Costumers
Clients
Competitors
Community
Retailers
Employees
Government
Investors
Media
Environment
Suppliers
Arguments against Business Ethics & CSR
Business, like gambling, is expected to be deceptive (Albert Carr, Harvard Business Review (1968))
Falsehood ceases to be falsehood when it is understood on all sides that the truth is not expected to be spoken
In other words, if all parties know that honesty isn’t anticipated, the falsehood loses its significance as a “lie” because it’s no longer a betrayal of trust or an attempt to deceive.
Corporate financial scandals
Enron’s communication
Madoff’s contributions to philanthropy
Company’s own interests in CSR actions
The “keep the bed linen” program in hotels
Only individuals have a moral responsibility, not firms
“The only business of business is business” (Milton Friedman, 1970)
Arguments for Business Ethics & CSR
1)Business has huge power within society, with potential for huge contributions
2)Business malpractice has the potential to inflict enormous harm
3)The demands to be ethical by various stakeholders are becoming more complex and challenging
4)Employees face significant pressure to compromise ethical standards
A survey of 500 financial services professionals in the UK and the US found that more than one in four had observed wrongdoing in the workplace
A quarter of respondents agreed that financial services professionals might need to engage in unethical or illegal conduct to be successful
5)Businesses face a trust deficit
Only 18% of the global population trusts business leaders to tell the truth
Last changeda month ago