Unit 1 Introduction BESR
Unit 1 Introduction BESR
Unit 1 Introduction BESR
SOCIAL RESPONSIBILITY
Abhimanyu Basyal
Unit 1: Introduction
Origin of Ethics
Ø The term “ethics” is derived from the Greek word “ethikos”
meaning custom or character.
Ø It is generally described as a set of principles or moral conduct.
Ø Ethics is a branch of philosophy and is considered a normative
science because it is concerned with the norms of human
conduct.
Ø Ethics, as a science, involves systemizing, defending, and
recommending concepts of right and wrong behaviour.
Meaning/Concept of Ethics
§ Ethics are beliefs about what is right and wrong or good and
bad. An individual’s personal values and morals, as well as
the social context, in which they occur, determine whether a
particular behavior is perceived as ethical or unethical.
Meaning/Concept of Ethics
§ Ethical behavior is behavior that conforms to individual
beliefs and social norms about what is right and good.
■ Ethics is a much wider term than law. The law may not cover
the required ethical behavior at all. ‘Look after the aged’, ‘be
considerate to your workers’, ‘Teach well to your students’, ‘Do
not tell a lie’, Obey your elders’, - will fall within the circle of
ethics but not within that of law.
4. Ethics & Values:
■ Values are the moral principles and beliefs or accepted
standards of a person or social group. They are the principles
or standards of behavior; one's judgement of what is important
in life.
■ Moral values are deep-seated ideas and feelings that manifest
themselves as behavior or conduct. These values are not so
easy to measure or express in words. There is a very thin line,
which distinguishes between ethics and values, both drive what
is right and what is wrong in human conduct and what ‘ought to
be’.
■ A relationship can be
derived between value and
ethics like this:
Value + Knowledge = Ethics
■ So as, we know the
consequences of our
actions, we can convert
values into rules of behavior
that can be derived as
ethics.
Business Ethics
■ Business Ethics is the application of general ethical ideas to
business behavior.
■ Business Ethics is the art and discipline of applying ethical
principles to examine and solve complex moral dilemmas.
■ Business Ethics is that set of principles or reasons which should
govern the conduct of business whether at the individual or
collective level.
■ Business ethics is based on the principle of integrity and fairness
and concentrates on the benefits to the stakeholders, both
internal and external.
Importance of Ethics in Business
■ Protection of Consumer Rights
■ Social Responsibility
■ Concept of Socialism
■ Interest of Industry
■ Consumer Movement
■ Better Relations With the Society
■ Buyer’s Market
■ Beneficial to Business and Society
Importance of Ethics in Business
■ Protection of Consumer Rights:- Consumer is the centre of all the
business activities. In fact, business is essentially meant for
satisfaction of consumer wants. Unfortunately, consumers are the
most neglected and exploited group. The application of business
ethics will help to confer and implement consumer rights.
■ Social Responsibility:- Business ethics is a means of making
business socially responsible for its actions. Exploitation of
consumers, employees, discriminate use of natural resources, etc.,
is quite common in all type of business. Compliance to ethical
standards will ensure (a) Protection of consumer rights (b) Public
accountability (c) Protection of worker’s interests, and (d) Proper
utilization of natural resources.
Importance of Ethics in Business
■ Concept of Socialism:- The Concept of Socialism in business states
that gains of a business must be shared by all and not just by the
owner of business. Profit is a sign of business skill and talent.
Profit is also a result of group efforts. Employees, shareholders,
consumers, suppliers, and others contribute to the success of the
business. Therefore, success should be shared by all concerned.
■ Interest of Industry:- Business Ethics are necessary to safeguard
the interests of the small scale business firms. The tendency of big
business firms is always to dominate the market and drive away
the small industries out of the market. Small scale units can
establish their position and fight for their right if the industry
follows a code of ethics.
Importance of Ethics in Business
■ Consumer Movement:- The growth in consumer movement is
also another important factor that has necessitated the need for
business ethics. The spread of education and awareness among
consumers about their rights has made the business community
to conduct business on ethical principles.
Pressure
Lack of Ethical
Greed
Knowledge
1. Misguided Loyalty
Negative Effect on
Employee Performance
1. Reduced Sales of Goods:
As customers may boycott goods produced by a company known for
unethical behavior.
2. Drop in Stock Price:
Investors will be unwilling to buy shares from companies known to
transact business dishonestly. Investing in dishonest firms will result in
poor returns.
3. Negative Effect on Employee Performance:
Employees are not motivated to work for an unethical company and
others. Ethics is important in business because it builds trust and
confidence in business relationships. Unethical actions may result in
negative publicity, declining sales, and even legal action.
MYTHS ABOUT BUSINESS ETHICS
■ MYTH 1: We learn ethics as little kids, not as adults.
■ MYTH 2: Sitting in behavior doesn’t change your behavior.
Only incentives change behavior.
■ MYTH 3: We all know what is right. It is just a matter of
doing it.
■ MYTH 4: Ethics is a matter of opinion; it’s just a matter of
personal values. There is no objectivity.
■ MYTH 5: Ethics is about personal values.
Myth 1: We learn ethics as little kids, not as
adults.
■ Ethical maturity grows with cognitive maturity. Making ethical
decisions requires brainpower.
■ Developmental psychology has shown that people become
more ethical as they become more mature in general.
■ Successful leaders tend to have more advanced ethical
reasoning skills. Lawrence Kohlberg asserts that you continue
to grow ethically even to your sixties. It is a life-long process.
Myth 2: Sitting in behavior doesn’t change your
behavior. Only incentives change behavior.
■ If this is true, let’s shut down all business school in Nepal. But
it is not. You all are doing BBA; because you believe learning
something will change your behavior.
2. Teleological Reasoning
3. Ontological Reasoning
1. Deontological Reasoning
■ The term deontology comes from the Greek Word “deon” means
“duty”.
■ According to the deontologist the rules and principles are crucial for
guiding human action.
■ To make the correct moral choices, we have to understand what our
moral duties are and what correct rules exist to regulate those duties.
■ Deontological reasoning is the judgment of the morality based on the
actions adherence to certain rules. It creates a certain boundary for
you to perform a duty, going out of that boundary will be considered
wrong or unethical.
■ Like for example: Stealing a book from a library. A library is a place
from where you are supposed to only borrow books for a time being so
stealing from there is a wrong doing.
2. Teleological Reasoning
■ The term teleology is derived from the Greek work “telos” which
means, “end” or “purpose”.
■ According to this theory the concept of right, wrong and duty are
subordinated to the concept of end or purpose of the action.
■ This reasoning believes in the consequences or the results of the
action. Action here is such which will bring good results i.e. finding a
right thing to do.
■ Good result becomes the benchmark rather than the specific course
of action. Here we analyze the optimum benefit rather than the
right action.
■ For example: Living your life with virtues so that you will ultimately
find happiness in life.
3. Ontological Reasoning
■ Here the positive character traits like courage, justice, honest,
generous, truthfulness etc. is the basis for moral judgment or
decision making.
■ A person who has gained excellence through his virtuous
activities is considered as morally right and he is one who is
able to avoid the negative aspects of life like cowardice and
vanity.
■ So, ethics is grounded in a sense that good is that which is
virtuous.
THE MORALITY OF PROFIT MOTIVE
■ Profit motive refers to the underlying motivation of business to
make more money (profits). It is morally criticized because the
owner of a business is motivated by profit alone, and monetary
motives are associated with selfishness and greed. This is the
cause of overconsumption, and exploitation of world’s
resources.
■ People are suspicious of profit, thinking that profit to one person
must mean a loss to someone. People and firms if were
motivated by something else besides profit, they would be
better able to provide the things that consumers really need.
The major criticism against the profit motive centers at the idea
that profits should not supersede the needs of the people.
■ An entrepreneur or a businessman who makes discoveries in the
marketplace is entitled to the rewards they generate. That is, if
customers demand safe products, or workers demands privacy,
then they will buy from or work for only those businesses that
meet their demands. Businesses that do not need these
demands will not survive. Since this view maintains that the drive
for profit will create morality, the strong version can be expressed
in the dictum that good business results in good ethics, which is
the converse of the above dictum.
■ For example: Consumers may opt for cheaper car without air
bags, even though doing so places their own lives and the lives of
their passenger at greater risk, which is morally irresponsible. In
short, not every business practice will simply emerge from the
profit principle.
The Good Side of Profit Motive
■ Profit mo`ve mo`vates the people to do meaningful as it gives
human life a goal to pursue and something to live for.
■ It helps to promote ingenuity and cleverness in running a
business.
■ It makes people produc`ve. As they desire for money,
businessmen have become produc`ve and some of their
products have been useful and have enhanced human life.
■ Profit-mo`ve generates poten`al capital for the business and
this poten`al capital can be invested to establish new business
which results in various job opportunity and more goods and
services to consumer.
The Bad Side of Profit Motive
■ Profit-motive promotes rivalry among competitors as competition
sometimes becomes stiff. This certainly creates negative effect in
business environment and people associated with it.
■ Profit-motive makes people so focused only in making money rather than
considering for the actual need of the customer which builds negative
trust among people.
■ Profit motive may turn individual business person from being reflective
and a questioning person because it focuses his attention on the practical
activity of making money.
■ It may promote self-interest rather than the common good. It may create
some social costs that many people have to suffer. Eg. Depletion of
natural resources, toxic wastes being thrown in rivers, pollution of the
environment, and disregard for the next generation to come.
The society as a whole
thus benefits from the
profits gained which
finally shows positive
impact in the economic
growth of country itself.
CORE ELEMENTS OF ETHICAL CHARACTER
■ Trustworthiness
■ Respect
■ Responsibility
■ Caring
■ Citizenship
■ Fairness
1. Trustworthiness
■ Trustworthiness, which includes honesty,
reliability and loyalty, is a core element of
ethical character for managers.
■ For example, he will not change the numbers in
his sales report to make it appear that his team
is performing better than it is, exaggerate
claims about his product or persuade
customers to buy more product than they need.
■ Honesty in conduct is playing by the rules,
without stealing, cheating, fraud, subterfuge
and other trickery.
2. Respect
■ People are not things, and everyone has a right to be treated with
dignity.
■ We certainly have no ethical duty to hold all people in high
esteem, but we should treat everyone with respect, regardless of
who they are and what they have done.
■ We have a responsibility to be the best we can be in all situations,
even when dealing with unpleasant people.
3. Responsibility
■ It means being accountable for what we do and who we are. It also
means recognizing that our actions matter and we are morally on
the hook for the consequences.
■ Our capacity to reason and our freedom to choose make us
morally autonomous and, therefore, answerable for whether we
honor or degrade the ethical principles that give life meaning and
purpose.
■ Ethical people show responsibility by being accountable, pursuing
excellence and exercising self-restraint. They exhibit the ability to
respond to expectations.
4. Caring
■ Caring is also a core element of ethical character. Managing a
business without hurting anyone's feelings is difficult but not
impossible.
■ However, a caring manager feels an emotional response to both
the pleasure and pain of others and consciously seeks to cause no
more harm that is necessary in carrying out his/her duties.
■ If you must reprimand or fire an employee, find a way to protect
his/her dignity.
5. Citizenship
■ Citizenship includes civic virtues and duties
that prescribe how we ought to behave as
part of a community.
■ Unlike respect, fairness does not require that all the parties be
identifiable – one can demonstrate fairness to a group of people
without knowing them directly.
Code of Ethics/Conduct
Code of Ethics/Conduct
■ An agreement on ethical standards for a profession or business.
■ Formalized rules and standards that describe what a company
expects of its employees.
■ Is in a written form that guides the behavior of the employees.
■ Employers should require all staff to abide by a code of
professional ethics.
■ The code of conduct for a group or organization is an agreement
on rules of behavior for the members of that group or
organization.
■ Usually it talks about expectations to obey the law, conflict of
interest, inside trading, preserving confidential information,
bribery, competition and about fair dealing.
■ A code of ethics is a written guide to acceptable and ethical behavior as
defined by an organization.
■ It outlines uniform policies, standards, and punishments for violations.
■ Because employees know what is expected of them and what will
happen if they violate the rules, a code of ethics goes a long way
towards encouraging ethical behavior.
■ However, codes cannot possibly cover every situation; companies must
also create an environment in which employees recognize the
importance of complying with the written code.
■ Managers must provide direction by fostering communication, actively
modeling, and encouraging ethical decision making and training
employees to make ethical decisions.
■ At many companies, a formal statement or code of ethics summarizes
core ideologies, corporate values, and expectations.
Significance of Code of Conduct
2. Ethical Responsibility
3. Economic Responsibility
4. Philanthropic Responsibility
Carrol’s Pyramid of CSR
Approaches to CSR Social Social
Contribution Obstruction
■ Growing Affluence
■ Ecological Sustainability
■ Globalization
■ Brands
CSR Domains
1. The Economic Domain (Mo$ve: To be Profitable)
Ø Shareholder value maximization or profit maximization