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Chapter-03 Ethics and Corporate Social Responsibility. Dr. Gehan Shanmuganathan , (DBA). Nestl e India and social responsibility…. Nestle India and social responsibility…. Vested in solving nation’s water problem while producing its products locally
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Chapter-03Ethics and Corporate Social Responsibility Dr. GehanShanmuganathan, (DBA)
Nestle India and social responsibility….. • Vested in solving nation’s water problem while producing its products locally • Nestle cater to Indian market with milk products, prepared dishes, cooking aids, and some beverages that are staples to Indian consumers • The company has introduced a water education program, bored wells for nearly 100 village schools for children and teaches hygiene programs • Nestle wants to create value for its shareholders and generate long-term values for society • Social responsibility leads to long term profits through corporate brand equity
Chapter Objectives… • Identify the philosophical principles behind business ethics. • Explain how values relate to ethics. • Identify factors contributing to lax ethics and common ethical temptations. • Apply a guide to ethical decision making. • Describe the stakeholder viewpoint of social responsibility and corporate social performance. • Present an overview of social-responsibility initiatives. • Summarize how managers can create an environment that fosters ethically and socially responsible behavior and the benefits of such activity
Definition • Business Ethics is the study of right and wrong and off the morality of the choices individuals make. An ethical decision or an action is one that is right according to some standard of behavior. Business ethics is duplication of moral standards to business situations. • Ethics is the study of moral obligation, or separating right from wrong
What research findings say… • Ethics is subjective- head-on advertising in the US • Customers, suppliers, and employees prefer to deal with ethical companies • Majority of full-time workers said that it is critical to work for an organization that is ethical • More than one in three workers said they have left a job because of ethical misconduct by fellow employees or managers • 82% of workers said they would like to receive less pay if they worked for an ethical company
Moral Intensity • The magnitude of an unethical act • A person might behave unethically if the magnitude of the consequence is low and versa vice-versa • Manager’s plagiarism on someone’s speech or unauthorized copy of software could be considered as ethical • Same manager might hesitate to sexually harass a business intern • The social consensus- degree of peer agreement • One would be hesitant to engage in an act if his or her peers think it is unethical
4.2 Philosophical Principles of Business Ethics Consequences -If no one gets hurt, the decision is ethical. When attempting to decide what is right and wrong, managers can focus on: Duties, obligations, and principles -If a decision violates a universal principle, it is unethical. Integrity -If the person in question has good character, a genuine motivation and intention.
Psychological basis for ethical behavior Cognitive area- Pertinent Experience stimulus Perception attitude First, second, and third hand experiences
Some concepts under consequences based ethicality • Pragmatism • focusing on consequences “the belief is that there are no absolute principles or standards, and no objective truth and no objective reality” • “The reality is whatever that works” • E.g- Bernard L.Madoff the former Nasdaq chairman thought that lying to customers was pragmatic • Utilitarianism • The utility of the decision • The net balance of good consequences verses bad
Values and Ethics • Values are closely related to ethics • Values are clear statements of what is critically important • Ethics become the vehicle for converting values into actions • E.g- we put people before profits (value) • Avoiding delay payments to employees, and suppliers • Excellent customer service (value) and infrastructure for performance
Values and ethical behavior Ethical Behavior Competitive Advantage Values Quality Customer service Ecological consciousness Social responsibility Cost consciousness Teamwork
Research reveals (survey of 2852) • Lying to employees (19%) • Engaging in conflicts of interest (16%) • Lying to outside stakeholders (12%) • Engaging in health and safety violations (11%) • Producing poor product quality (9%) • Stealing (9%) • Sexual harassment (7%)
4.3 Factors Contributing to Ethical Problems • An individual’s desire to maximize self-gain at the expense of others • An organizational atmosphere that condones unethical behavior • Moral laxity - slippage in moral behavior because other issues seem more important • Pressure from higher management to achieve organizational goals • Strength of relationships among people
4.4 Ethical Temptations and Violations Stealing from employers & customers Illegally copying software Accepting bribes for doing business with other companies Treating people unfairly Misuse of corporate resources Sexual harassment Divulging confidential information Corporate espionage Conflict of interest
Business Scandals as Ethical Violations • Internet fraud • Identity theft • Work-at-home (such as making you as an agent for transferring funds received from customers) • Consequences of these scandals are, • Job losses • Wiping out pension funds • Investments losses • Bankruptcy
4.5 A Guide to Ethical Decision Making • Is it right? • Is it fair? • Who gets hurt? • Would you be comfortable if the details of your decision were reported on the front page of your newspaper or throughout the company? • Would you tell your child to do it? • How does it smell? Based on intuition
Corporate social responsibility • The idea that firms have obligations to society beyond their economic obligations to owners or stockholders and also beyond those prescribed by law or contract
Three components of social responsibility • Cognitive component • Thinking about the organization’s relationships with its parties at interest • Linguistic component • Explaining the organization’s reasons for engaging in certain activities and how it goes about sharing these explanations with others • Conative component • What the firm actually does along with the commitment and consistency it shows in conducting its acts of social responsibilities
Stockholder versus Stakeholder Viewpoints • Stockholder viewpoint The traditional perspective on social responsibility that a business organization is responsible only to its owners and stockholders • Stakeholder viewpoint The viewpoint of social responsibility contending that firms must hold themselves responsible for the quality of life of the many groups affected by the firm’s actions
The Organization 4.6 The Stakeholder Viewpoint of Social Responsibility Owners Stockholders Internal Stakeholders Employees Board of Directors Customers Suppliers Creditors Labor Unions External Stakeholders Competitors Special Interest Groups Customer Groups Government Agencies Financial Institutions Adapted from Exhibit 4.4
Corporate Social Performance • The extent to which a firm responds to the demands of its stakeholders for behaving in a socially responsible manner • Discuss how Wal-Mart controls its supplies in order to achieve their cost advantage as an irresponsible corporate citizen in performing its social responsibility (lay-offs of employees of suppliers) discuss the bargaining power of Wal-Mart
Environmental Management Work/Life Programs Acceptance of Whistle Blowers Creating opportunities for Diverse workforce Community Redevelopment Projects 4.7 Compassionate Downsizing Social Responsibility Initiatives
Corporate social responsibility initiatives • Philanthropy • Donate money to charity and other various causes • Work/Life Programs • Programs that the employees could balance the demands of work and personal life • Community Redevelopment Project • Investing on rebuild distressed communities • Acceptance of Whistle-Blowers • Employees who disclose organizational wrongdoing to parties who could take actions • Compassionate Downsizing • Controlling the downsizing to the minimum level • Opportunities for diverse workforce
Environmental Protection • Environmental protection is a concern the organization have in managing sustainable environment or “going green” • Going green is an approach to defining and creating processes that are • Environmentally friendly • Economically viable • Pragmatic in the long run
Some methods to manage • Commit to lowering carbon dioxide and other hazardous emissions • Developing green supply chain • Make sustainability and eco-friendly policies in the business plan • Implement four-day workweek • Manufacture and sell products with recycled materials • Invest heavily in recycling • Plant a rooftop garden on your office building or factory
Create formal mechanisms to monitor ethics Provide written codes of conduct Offer training programs Talk about the issues Lead by example Confront ethical deviations 4.8 Creating an Ethical andSocially Responsible Work Place
Virtuous circle • The relationship between investment on social responsible projects and financial performance where corporate social performance and corporate financial performance feed and reinforce each other
Virtuous circle Investments on Socially responsible Projects Financial Performance
What we learned…. • Identify the philosophical principles behind business ethics. • Explain how values relate to ethics. • Identify factors contributing to lax ethics and common ethical temptations. • Apply a guide to ethical decision making. • Describe the stakeholder viewpoint of social responsibility and corporate social performance. • Present an overview of social-responsibility initiatives. • Summarize how managers can create an environment fosters ethically and socially responsible behavior and the benefits of such activity
Write five key things (areas) that you can critically remember in today’s discussion
Weekly assignment- 03 • “Organizations have to be much profit oriented than being socially responsible, especially during an economic depression”. Do you agree or disagree? Discuss.