The Importance of Business Ethics - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 16
About This Presentation
Title:

The Importance of Business Ethics

Description:

The difference between an ordinary decision and an ethical one is the point ... JFK's Consumer Bill of Rights ushered in a new era of consumerism ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:8308
Avg rating:5.0/5.0
Slides: 17
Provided by: ocoll1
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: The Importance of Business Ethics


1
Chapter 1
  • The Importance of Business Ethics

2
Why differentiate between
rules/policies/law ethics?
  • The difference between an ordinary decision and
    an ethical one is the point where rules no longer
    serve.
  • Values and judgment play a key role in ethics
    decisions.

3
What to Consider When Applying Ethics to Business
  • Businesses must earn a profit
  • Businesses must balance profits against the needs
    and desires of society.
  • Maintaining this balance often requires
    compromise and tradeoffs.

4
Business ethics...
  • comprises principles and standards that guide
    behavior in the world of business.
  • Whether a specific behavior is ethical or
    unethical is often determined by stakeholders
  • investors
  • employees
  • customers
  • interest groups
  • the legal system
  • the community

5
Ethics social responsibility have
distinct meanings...
  • Social responsibility is the obligation a
    business assumes to maximize its positive effect
    while minimizing its negative effect on society.
  • Social responsibility consists of the following
    responsibilities
  • economic (satisfy investors)
  • legal (obey the law)
  • ethical (expected activities behaviors)
  • philanthropic (desired activities behaviors)

6
Why study business ethics?
  • Reports of unethical behavior are on the rise.
  • Individual ethics is not enough.
  • Studying business ethics helps identify ethical
    issues to key stakeholders.

7
Ethical Issues on the Rise...
  • Increased awareness of
  • accounting fraud
  • insider trading of stocks and bonds
  • falsifying of organizational documents
  • deceptive advertising
  • defective products
  • bribery
  • employee theft

8
Before 1960 Ethics in Business...
  • Theological discussions of ethics emerged
  • Catholic social ethics included a concern for
    morality in business, workers rights and living
    wages.
  • Protestants developed ethics courses in their
    seminaries and schools of theology. (Also, the
    Protestant work ethic encouraged frugality and
    hard work.)

9
The 1960s The Rise of Social Issues
in Business...
  • Societal social consciousness emerged
  • as well as an anti-business sentiment
  • JFKs Consumer Bill of Rights ushered in a new
    era of consumerism
  • right to safety, to be informed, to choose and to
    be heard
  • Consumer protection groups fought for
    consumer protection legislation
  • Ralph Nader

10
The 1970s Business Ethics as an Emerging
Field...
  • Business professors began to write about social
    responsibility.
  • Businesses became more concerned with their
    public image and addressed ethics more directly.
  • Conferences were held and centers developed.
  • Issues
  • bribery, deceptive advertising, price collusion,
    product safety, and the environment

11
The 1980s Consolidation
  • Membership in business ethics
    organizations increased.
  • Ethics centers provided
  • publications, courses, conferences and seminars
  • Firms established ethics committees.
  • The Reagan/Bush era ushered in a belief that
    self-regulation, rather than government
    regulation, was in the best public interest.

12
The 1990s Institutionalization of
Business Ethics...
  • The Federal Sentencing Guidelines for
    Organizations set the tone for ethical
    compliance.
  • These took preventative actions against
    misconduct a company could avoid or minimize the
    potential penalties.

13
The Federal Sentencing
Guidelines for Organizations...
  • standards and procedures capable of detecting and
    preventing misconduct
  • high level oversight
  • care in delegation of authority
  • effective communication (training)
  • systems to monitor, audit and
    report misconduct
  • consistent enforcement
  • continuous improvement

14
The 21st Century A New Focus
  • A move from legally based ethics initiatives to
    culturally or integrity based programs
  • although, legislation such as the Sarbanes-Oxley
    Act was passed to address the lack of confidence
    in financial reporting and corporate ethics
  • Realization that business ethics programs are
    good for business
  • Businesses working more closely together,
    globally, to establish standards of acceptable
    behavior

15
Relationship of Business Ethics to Performance
  • The benefits of ethical behavior reach to
    employees, investors, and customers.
  • Employee commitment comes from employees who
    believe their future is tied to that of the
    organization and their willingness to make
    personal sacrifices for the organization.
  • Companies perceived by their employees as having
    a high level of honesty and integrity are more
    profitable than companies with a low level of
    honesty and integrity.
  • Consumers respond positively to socially
    concerned businesses.
  • Being good can be extremely profitable.

16
Ethics Contributes to Profits
  • Corporate concern for ethical conduct is
    increasingly being integrated with strategic
    planning to maximize profitability.
  • Corporate citizenship is positively associated
    with
  • return on investment and assets
  • sales growth
  • Many studies have found a positive relationship
    between citizenship and performance.
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com