Professional Documents
Culture Documents
BA 362 Ch003
BA 362 Ch003
McGraw-Hill/Irwin
Business Ethics: Decision-Making for Personal Integrity 3-2
& Social Responsibility, Copyright © 2008
1-2
The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
Chapter Objectives
After exploring this chapter, you will be able to:
1. Explain the ethical tradition of utilitarianism
2. Describe how utilitarian thinking underlies much
economic and business decision-making
3. Explain how free markets might serve the utilitarian goal
of maximizing the overall good.
4. Explain strengths and weaknesses of utilitarian decision-
making
5. (continued)
3-3
1-3
Chapter Objectives
3-4
1-4
Opening Decision Point: Should
Managers Value Supplier Loyalty?
How would you describe the decision faced by the purchasing
manager? Is it an ethical issue at all? Why or why not?
Are there any factual questions that you would want to resolve
before making such a decision?
What alternatives are available for the purchasing manager?
What role, if any, should the principle of loyalty play in business
decisions?
Do you agree that employees have a duty to seek the greatest
profits for their companies? What values are promoted by such a
duty?
[continued]
3-5
1-5
Opening Decision Point: Should
Managers Value Supplier Loyalty?
What duties does the purchasing manager have? To whom does the
purchasing manager owe responsibility; who are the stakeholders
involved?
Assume that it is true that foreign trade will produce greater long-
term overall economic consequences. Is it fair for some individuals
to lose their jobs so that other individuals will benefit in the future?
Does a business have responsibilities to suppliers that are not
specified in their contracts? What other alternatives are available to
the purchasing manager and how do these alternatives impact each
stakeholder or group of stakeholders?
Is it fair that loyal suppliers be treated this way?
Is there anywhere else you can look for assistance or guidance?
3-6
1-6
The Ethical Question:
How should we live our lives?
3-7
1-7
Decision Point: Who is to say
what is right or wrong?
An ethical relativist holds that ethical values are relative to
particular people, cultures, or times.
The relativist denies that there are can be any rationally
justified or objective ethical judgments.
When there are ethical disagreements between people or
cultures, the ethical relativist concludes that there is no way to
resolve that dispute and to prove that one side is right or more
reasonable than the other.
Do you believe that there is no way to decide what is right or
wrong?
3-8
1-8
Decision Point:
Application
Imagine a teacher returns an assignment to you with a grade of “F.”
When you ask for an explanation, you are told that, frankly, the teacher
does not believe that people “like you” (e.g., women, Christians, African
Americans) are capable of doing good work in this field (e.g., science,
engineering, math, finance).
When you object that this is unfair and wrong, the teacher offers a
relativist explanation. “Fairness is a matter of personal opinion,” the
professor explains.
“Who determines what is fair or unfair?” you ask.
Your teacher claims that his view of what is fair is as valid as any other.
Because everyone is entitled to their own personal opinion, he is entitled
to fail you since, in his personal opinion, you do not deserve to succeed.
3-9
1-9
Theological vs.
Philosophical Ethics
Many people and cultures across the world base their ethical
views on certain religious or theological foundations.
Unlike theological ethics, which explains human well-being
in religious terms, philosophical ethics provides
justifications that must be applicable to all people regardless,
of their religious starting points.
3-10
1-10
Utilitarianism: Making Decisions
based on Ethical Consequences
(insert obj. 1)
Utilitarianism has its roots in 18th and 19th Century social and political
philosophy and was part of the same social movement that gave rise to
modern democratic market capitalism.
Promulgated by John Stuart Mill & Jeremy Bentham
“… “the ‘greatest happiness principle’ holds that actions are right in
proportion as they tend to promote happiness; wrong as they tend to
produce the reverse of happiness.” - John Stuart Mill
3-11
1-11
Day 4
3-12
1-12
A Decision-Making Model for
Business Ethics Revisited
3. Identify stakeholders. Who will be affected by this decision? What are
their relationships, their priorities to me, and what is their power over
my decision or results? Who has a stake in the outcome? Do not limit
your inquiry only to those stakeholders to whom you believe you owe a
duty; sometimes a duty arises as a result of the impact. For instance,
you might not necessarily first consider your competitors as
stakeholders; however, once you understand the impact of your decision
on those competitors, an ethical duty may arise
4. Consider the available alternatives. Exercise “moral imagination.”
Are there creative ways to resolve conflicts? Explore not only the
obvious choices, but also those that are less obvious and that require
some creative thinking or moral imagination to create. Imagine how the
situation appears from other points of view.
3-13
1-13
A Decision-Making Model for
Business Ethics Revisited
5. Consider how a decision affects stakeholders. Take the point of view of
other people involved How is each stakeholder affected by my decision?
Imagine a decision that would prove acceptable to all parties. Compare and
weigh the alternatives: ethical theories and traditions can help here.
a. Consequences
i. beneficial and harmful consequences
ii. Who gets the benefits? Who bears the costs?
b. Duties, rights, principles
i. What does the law say?
ii. Are there professional duties involved
iii. Which principles are most obligatory?
iv. How are people being treated?
v. What is a fair and impartial decision?
c. Implications for personal integrity and character
i. What type of person am I becoming through this decision?
ii. What are my own principles and purposes?
iii. Can I live with public disclosure of this decision?
3-14
1-14
A Decision-Making Model for
Business Ethics Revisited
Guidance. Can you discuss the case with relevant others; Can you
gather additional opinions or perspectives? Are their any guidelines,
codes or other external sources that might shed light on the
dilemma?
Assessment. Have you built in mechanisms for assessment of your
decision and possible modifications, if necessary? Make sure that
you learn from each decision and move forward with that increased
knowledge as you are then faced with similar decisions in the future
or to make changes to your current situation.
3-15
1-15
Utilitarianism
Utilitarianism begins with the conviction that we should
decide what to do by considering the consequences of our
actions.
Utilitarianism tells us that we should act in ways that produce
better overall consequences than the alternatives we are
considering.
⚫ “Better” consequences are those that promote human well-being:
the happiness, health, dignity, integrity, freedom, respect of all the
people affected.
A decision that promotes the greatest amount of these
values for the greatest number of people is the most
reasonable decision from an ethical point of view.
3-16
1-16
Utilitarianism: Examples (insert obj. 2)
Utilitarianism provides strong support for democratic institutions and
policies and opposes those policies that aim to benefit only a small
social, economic, or political minority because of its emphasis on
producing the greatest good for the greatest number.
Therefore, it could be said that the economy and economic
institutions are utilitarian in that they exist to provide the highest
standard of living for the greatest number of people, not simply to
create wealth for a privileged few.
3-17
1-17
Utilitarianism: Examples
3-18
1-18
Utilitarianism: Examples
Thus, one might argue on utilitarian grounds that
such labor practices are ethically permissible
because they produce better overall consequences
than the alternatives.
3-19
1-19
Utilitarianism:
Lessons from Examples
Because utilitarians decide on the basis of
consequences, and because the consequences of our
actions will depend on the specific facts of each
situation, utilitarians tend to be very pragmatic
thinkers.
No act is ever absolutely right or wrong in all cases
in every situation; it will always depend on the
consequences.
3-20
1-20
Utilitarianism:
Lessons from Examples
Utilitarian reasoning usually supplies some support for each
competing available alternative, e.g., ban child labor as
harmful to the overall good or allow child labor as
contributing to the overall good.
Deciding on the ethical legitimacy of alternative decisions
requires that we make judgments about the likely
consequences of our actions.
How do we do this? Within the utilitarian tradition, there is a
strong inclination to rely on the social sciences for help in
making such predictions.
3-21
1-21
Utilitarianism and Business: Profit
Maximization vs. Public Policy
Approaches (insert obj. 3)
Another question remains to be answered:
How do we achieve maximum overall
happiness? What is the best means for
attaining it? Two answers prove especially
relevant in business and business ethics.
3-22
1-22
Profit Maximization vs.
Public Policy Approaches
Profit-Maximization Perspective: Based on the tradition of
Adam Smith, claims that free and competitive markets are the
best means for attaining utilitarian goals.
Neo-classical free market economics advises us that the most
efficient means to attain that goal is to structure our economy
according to the principles of free market capitalism.
3-23
1-23
Utilitarianism and Business: Profit
Maximization vs. Public Policy
Approaches
Profit-Maximization:
⚫ This requires that business managers, in turn, should seek to
maximize profits.
⚫ By pursuing profits, business insures that scarce resources are
going to those who most value them and thereby insure that
resources will provide optimal overall satisfaction.
⚫ Thus, competitive markets are seen by these economists as the
most efficient means to the utilitarian end of maximizing
happiness.
3-24
1-24
Profit Maximization vs. Public
Policy Approaches
Public Policy Perspective: Turns to policy experts who
can predict the outcome of various policies and carry out
policies that will attain utilitarian ends.
3-25
1-25
Problems of Utilitarian Ethics
(insert obj. 4)
3-26
1-26
Decision Point:
Do the Ends Justify the Means?
Consider the ethical and political controversy arose in recent years the
treatment of hundreds of prisoners captured during the fighting in
Afghanistan and Iraq.
The government argued that these were dangerous individuals who
posed a significant threat to the United States and that this threat justified
the treatment they received.
Government attorneys even argued that because these individuals were
not members of the military of a recognized country, they were not
protected by international law and prohibitions against torture.
The government argued that they were justified in using severe treatment
that bordered on torture to extract information from these prisoners if
this information could prevent future attacks on the United States.
(continued)
3-27
1-27
Decision Point:
Do the Ends Justify the Means?
Critics argued that some actions, torture among them, are so
unethical that they should never be used, even if the result
was lost opportunity to prevent attacks. Many critics argued
that all people, even terrorists, deserve fundamental rights of
a trial, legal representation, and due process.
Do the ends of preventing attacks on the United States ever,
under any circumstances, justify the means of torture?
Does utilitarianism work to give us the answer in this case?
3-28
1-28
Benefits of Utilitarian Ethics
3-29
1-29
Deontology: Making Decisions
based on Ethical Principles (insert obj. 5)
Making decisions based upon the consequences certainly
should be a part of responsible ethical decision-making.
But some decisions should be matters of principle, not
consequences - the ends do not always justify the means.
How do we know what principles we should follow and how
do we decide when a principle should trump beneficial
consequences?
Principle-based, or “deontological” ethical theories, work out
the details of such questions.
3-30
1-30
Where do we find these
principles?
The law is one example of a type of rule that we ought to
follow, even when it does not promote happiness.
Other rules are derived from various institutions in which we
participate, or from various social roles that we fill (such as
our professional roles)
⚫ Perhaps the most dramatic example of role-based duties concerns
the work of professionals within business.
⚫ Many of these roles, often described as “gatekeeper functions,”
insure the integrity and proper functioning of the economic, legal,
or financial system.
3-31
1-31
The Social Contract as Principle
3-32
1-32
Moral Rights and Duties (insert obj. 6)
3-33
1-33
Respecting Human Dignity
3-34
1-34
What rights do we have?
3-35
1-35
What rights do we have?
From this we can see how two related rights have emerged as
fundamental within philosophical ethics.
If autonomy, or “self-rule,” is a fundamental characteristic of
human nature, then the freedom to make our own choices
deserves special protection as a basic right.
But since all humans possess this fundamental characteristic,
equal treatment and equal consideration is also a
fundamental right.
3-36
1-36
Universalism - Rights to be recognized??
(“Notstandsfest” (German) or non-negotiable)
3-37
1-37
Distinguishing between Moral
Rights and Legal Rights (insert obj. 7)
Legal rights may be granted on the basis of legislation or
judicial rulings.
Legal rights might also arise from contractual agreements.
One cannot contract away one’s moral rights - moral rights lie
outside of the bargaining that occurs in a contract.
Moral rights establish the basic moral framework for legal
environment itself, and more specifically for any contracts
that are negotiated within business.
3-38
1-38
Social Justice: Rawlsian Justice
as Fairness (insert obj. 8)
The American philosopher John Rawls has developed one of
the most powerful and influential accounts of justice.
Rawls offers a contemporary version of the social contract
theory that understand basic ethical rules as part of an implicit
contract necessary to insure social cooperation.
Rawls’s theory of justice consists of two major components: a
method for determining the principles of justice that
should govern society, and the specific principles that are
derived from that method.
3-39
1-39
Rawlsian Justice as Fairness:
Application of The Method
Imagine rational and self-interested individuals having to
choose and agree on the fundamental principles for their
society.
The image of members of a constitutional convention is a
helpful model for this idea.
To ensure that the principles are fair and impartial, imagine
further that these individuals do not know the specific details
or characteristics of their own lives.
They do not know their abilities or disabilities and talents or
weaknesses; they have no idea about their position in the
social structure of this new society.
3-40
1-40
Rawlsian Justice as Fairness: Veil
of Ignorance
They are, in Rawls’s terms, behind a “veil of ignorance” and
must choose principles by which they will abide when they
come out from behind the veil.
To ensure that each individual is treated as an end and not as a
means, imagine finally that these individuals must
unanimously agree on the principles.
These initial conditions of impartiality, what Rawls calls the
“original position,” guarantee that the principles chosen are
fair – the primary value underlying for Rawls’ concept of
justice.
3-41
1-41
Rawls would contend that:
3-42
1-42
Rawlsian Justice as Fairness:
The Original Position
The idea of this “original position,” of having to make decisions
behind a veil of ignorance, is at the heart of Rawls’ theory that
fairness is the central element of a just decision or just
organization.
He contends that our decisions ought to be made in such a way,
and our social institutions ought to be organized in such a way, that
they would prove acceptable to us no matter whose point of view
we take.
He would argue that the only way we can reach this conclusion is
to seek out this original perspective from behind a veil of
ignorance, to strive towards a perspective of ignorance with regard
to our position and instead to strive toward impartiality.
3-43
1-43
Reality Check: Sharing the pie
Imagine your favorite dessert. You are cutting a pie before the arrival of
the guests, you don’t know which slice will be yours once your guests are
allowed to choose theirs first. (This is comparable to having to decide
behind the veil of ignorance.)
So, you are likely to cut each slice the same size so that you will at least
end up with a slice as large as everyone else and, at least, no smaller. The
same will be true, Rawls would argue, with the distribution of goods and
services in a social group.
If you are not certain in which group you might fall once the hypothetical
veil is lifted, you are most likely to treat each group with the greatest care
and equality in case that is the group in which you later find yourself.
See diagrams, next slide.
3-44
1-44
Pie distribution under Veil of Ignorance
25% 25%
You
Your Friend
Your Friend
Your Friend
25% 25%
20%
You
Your Friend
Your Friend
20%
20%
3-45
1-45
Rawlsian Justice: Lessons Learned for
Economics and Business Institutions
Rawls derives two fundamental principles of justice from this
original position.
The first principle states that each individual is to have an
equal right to the most extensive system of liberties - equal
rights are a fundamental element of social justice.
The second principle that is derived from the veil of
ignorance holds that benefits and burdens of a society
should generally be distributed equally.
3-46
1-46
Virtue Ethics: Making Decisions
based on Integrity and Character(insert
obj. 9)
3-47
1-47
Virtue Ethics
3-48
1-48
Virtue Ethics
3-52
1-52
A Decision-Making Model for
Business Ethics Revisited
3. Identify stakeholders. Who will be affected by this decision? What are
their relationships, their priorities to me, and what is their power over
my decision or results? Who has a stake in the outcome? Do not limit
your inquiry only to those stakeholders to whom you believe you owe a
duty; sometimes a duty arises as a result of the impact. For instance,
you might not necessarily first consider your competitors as
stakeholders; however, once you understand the impact of your decision
on those competitors, an ethical duty may arise
4. Consider the available alternatives. Exercise “moral imagination.”
Are there creative ways to resolve conflicts? Explore not only the
obvious choices, but also those that are less obvious and that require
some creative thinking or moral imagination to create. Imagine how the
situation appears from other points of view.
3-53
1-53
A Decision-Making Model for
Business Ethics Revisited
5. Consider how a decision affects stakeholders. Take the point of view of
other people involved How is each stakeholder affected by my decision?
Imagine a decision that would prove acceptable to all parties. Compare and
weigh the alternatives: ethical theories and traditions can help here.
a. Consequences
i. beneficial and harmful consequences
ii. Who gets the benefits? Who bears the costs?
b. Duties, rights, principles
i. What does the law say?
ii. Are there professional duties involved
iii. Which principles are most obligatory?
iv. How are people being treated?
v. What is a fair and impartial decision?
c. Implications for personal integrity and character
i. What type of person am I becoming through this decision?
ii. What are my own principles and purposes?
iii. Can I live with public disclosure of this decision?
3-54
1-54
A Decision-Making Model for
Business Ethics Revisited
Guidance. Can you discuss the case with relevant others; Can you
gather additional opinions or perspectives? Are their any guidelines,
codes or other external sources that might shed light on the
dilemma?
Assessment. Have you built in mechanisms for assessment of your
decision and possible modifications, if necessary? Make sure that
you learn from each decision and move forward with that increased
knowledge as you are then faced with similar decisions in the future
or to make changes to your current situation.
3-55
1-55
Discussion of Opening Decision Point:
Should Managers Value Supplier Loyalty?
One crucial lesson from this decision point is the fact that
very many business decisions implicitly involve a wide range
of ethical issues.
The purchasing manager may well believe that the decision
to outsource suppliers is simply a financial decision. The
manager is behaving as the business, financial, and economic
system expects.
But, it should be clear that financial and ethical
considerations are not mutually exclusive. Business
decisions often involve both. One does not avoid ethical
responsibility by making a financial decision. Finance and
business management are not value-neutral.
3-56
1-56
Discussion of Opening Decision Point:
Should Managers Value Supplier Loyalty?
Loyalty surely has a place in personal and social relationships. But does
it have a role in business relationships?
Some would argue that loyalty is seldom a two-way street in business. A
company may ask for or expect loyalty from employees, by asking them
to sacrifice free time on weekend for work for example. But companies
may not be as willing to sacrifice for employees in return.
Citizens are expected to be loyal to their own country, but are
corporations citizens? If the law treats a corporation as a legal person,
does this imply that the corporation has a specific duty of loyalty to the
country?
Should a company sacrifice profits by declining to outsource jobs and
production?
3-59
1-59
Chapter Three Vocabulary Terms
After examining this Chapter, you should have a clear understanding of the following
Key Terms and you will find them defined in the Glossary:
⚫ Autonomy
⚫ Categorical Imperative
⚫ Character
⚫ Consequentialist Theories
⚫ Deontological Ethics
⚫ Duties
⚫ Egoism
⚫ Ethical Relativism
⚫ Loyalty
⚫ Morality
⚫ Rights
⚫ Social Contract Theory
⚫ Social Ethics
⚫ Utilitarianism
⚫ Veil of Ignorance
⚫ Virtue Ethics
3-60
1-60