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Business
Ethics MGT610
VU
LESSON
01
INTRODUCTION
Let's begins
with a case study of Merck
and Company, discussing how
they dealt with
the
problem
of developing a drug that was
potentially life-saving but
which presented them
with
little,
if any, chance of earning a return on
their investment.
The
drug was Ivermectin, one of their
best-selling animal drugs.
The potential market for
the
drug
was those suffering from river
blindness an agonizing disease
afflicting about 18
million
impoverished
individuals in Africa and Latin
America. The disease is
particularly horrendous:
worms
as long as two feet curl up
in nodules under an infected
person's skin, slowly
sending
out
offspring that cause intense
itching, lesions, blindness, and
ultimately death (though
many
sufferers
actually commit suicide
before the final stage of
the disease).
The
need for the drug was
clear. However, the victims
of river blindness are
almost exclusively
poor.
It seemed unlikely that
Merck would ever recoup
the estimated $100 million it would
cost
to
develop the human version of
the drug. Moreover, if there
proved to be adverse human
side
effects,
this might affect sales of
the very profitable animal
version that were $300
million of
Merck's
$2 billion annual sales.
Finally, Congress was getting
ready to pass the
Drug
Regulation
Act, which would intensify
competition in the drug
industry by allowing
competitors
to more quickly copy and
market drugs originally
developed by other companies.
Questions:
Was Merck morally obligated
to develop this drug?
Their
managers felt, ultimately,
that they were. They
even went so far as to give
the drug away
for
free. This story seems to
run counter to the
assumption that, given the
choice between
profits
and ethics, companies will always choose
the former. The choice,
however, may not be
as
clear-cut as this dichotomy
suggests. Some have
suggested that, in the long
run, Merck will
benefit
from this act of kindness
just as they are currently
benefiting from a similar
situation in
Japan.
Even
so, most companies would
probably not invest in an R & D
project that promises no
profit.
And some companies often
engage in outright unethical
behavior. Still,
habitually
engaging
in such behavior is not a good
long-term business strategy, and it is
the view of this
book
that, though unethical
behavior sometimes pays off, ethical
behavior is better in the
long
run.
A
more basic problem is the
fact that the ethical
choice is not always clear.
Merck, as a for-
profit
corporation, has responsibilities to
its shareholders to make a profit. Companies
that
spend
all their funds on
unprofitable ventures will find
themselves out of business.
This
book takes the view
that ethical behavior is the
best long-term business
strategy for a
company--a
view that has become
increasingly accepted during
the last few years.
This does
not
mean that occasions never
arise when doing what is
ethical will prove costly to a
company.
Such
occasions are common in the
life of a company, and we will see
many examples in this
book.
Nor does it mean that
ethical behavior is always
rewarded or that unethical
behavior is
always
punished. On the contrary,
unethical behavior sometimes pays off,
and the good guy
sometimes
loses. To say that ethical behavior is
the best long-range business
strategy means
merely
that, over the long
run and for the most
part, ethical behavior can
give a company
significant
competitive advantages over companies
that are not ethical.
The example of Merck
and
Company suggests this view,
and a bit of reflection over
how we, as consumers
and
employees,
respond to companies that behave unethically
supports it. Later we see
what more
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Business
Ethics MGT610
VU
can
be said for or against the
view that ethical behavior
is the best long-term
business strategy
for
a company.
This
text aims to clarify the
ethical issues that managers
of modern business organizations
must
face.
This does not mean that it
is designed to give moral
advice to people in business nor
that
it
is aimed at persuading people to act in certain
moral ways. The main purpose
of the text is to
provide
a deeper knowledge of the
nature of ethical principles and concepts
and an
understanding
of how these apply to the
ethical problems encountered in business.
This type of
knowledge
and understanding should help
managers more clearly see
their way through
the
ethical
uncertainties that confront
them in their business
lives--uncertainties such as those
faced
by the managers of
Merck.
Business
Issues
According
to the dictionary, the term
ethics
has a
variety of different meanings.
One of its
meanings
is: "the principles of
conduct governing an individual or a
group". We sometimes use
the
term personal
ethics, for
example, when referring to
the rules by which an
individual lives
his
or her personal life. We use
the term accounting
ethics when
referring to the code
that
guides
the professional conduct of
accountants.
A
second--and more important--meaning of
ethics,
according to
the dictionary, is: Ethics
is
"the
study of morality." Ethicists
use the term ethics
to refer
primarily to the study of
morality,
just
as chemists use the term
chemistry
to refer to
a study of the properties of
chemical
substances.
Although ethics deals with
morality, it is not quite
the same as morality. Ethics
is a
kind
of investigation--and includes both
the activity of investigating as
well as the results
of
that
investigation--whereas morality is the
subject matter that ethics
investigates.
This
chapter discusses the case
of B.F. Goodrich to clarify
these definitions. Kermit
Vandivier
was
presented with a moral
quandary: he knew that
Goodrich was producing brakes
for the
U.S.
government that were likely
to fail, but was required by
his superiors to report that
the
brake
passed the necessary tests.
His choice was to write the
false report and go against
his
ethical
principles, or be fired and suffer
the economic
consequences.
He
chose the former, even
though his moral standards
were in conflict with his
actions. Such
standards
include the norms we have
about the kinds of actions
we believe are right and
wrong,
such
as "always tell the truth."
As Vandivier shows, we do not
always live up to our
standards.
There
are other types of standards
as well, such as standards of
etiquette, law, and
language.
Moral
standards can be distinguished from
non-moral standards using
five characteristics:
1.
Moral standards deal with
matters that can seriously
injure or benefit humans.
For
example,
most people in American society
hold moral standards against
theft, rape,
enslavement,
murder, child abuse, assault,
slander, fraud, lawbreaking, and so
on.
2.
Moral standards are not
established or changed by authoritative bodies. The
validity of
moral
standards rests on the adequacy of
the reasons that are
taken to support and
justify
them; so long as these
reasons are adequate, the
standards remain
valid.
3.
Moral standards, we feel, should be
preferred to other values,
including self-interest.
This
does not mean, of course, that it is
always wrong to act on self-interest; it
only
means
that it is wrong to choose
self-interest over
morality
4.
Moral standards are based on
impartial considerations. The
fact that you will
benefit
from
a lie and that I will be harmed is
irrelevant to whether lying is
morally wrong.
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Business
Ethics MGT610
VU
5.
Moral standards are
associated with special emotions and a
special vocabulary (guilt,
shame,
remorse, etc.). The fact
that you will benefit from a
lie and that I will be
harmed
is
irrelevant to whether lying is
morally wrong.
Ethics
is
the discipline that examines
one's moral standards or the
moral standards of a
society.
It
asks how these standards
apply to our lives and
whether these standards are
reasonable or
unreasonable--that
is, whether they are
supported by good reasons or poor
ones. Therefore, a
person
starts to do ethics when he or she
takes the moral standards
absorbed from family,
church,
and friends and asks: What do
these standards imply for
the situations in which I
find
myself?
Do these standards really make
sense? What are the
reasons for or against
these
standards?
Why should I continue to believe in
them? What can be said in
their favor and what
can
be said against them? Are
they really reasonable for
me to hold? Are their
implications in
this
or that particular situation
reasonable?
Taking
Vandivier as an example, we might
ask if writing the false
report was really
wrong
given
his responsibilities to support
his family. Moreover, the
company, not Vandivier,
would
be
held responsible for any
faulty brakes. Finally, even if he
did not cooperate and
was
consequently
fired, the brakes would
still be manufactured and installed.
The consequences of
writing
the report or not would be
the same, except that if he
chose not to participate he
would
be
fired. It is in considering such
points that we begin to do
ethics.
Ethics
is the study of moral
standards--the process of examining
the moral standards of a
person
or
society to determine whether
these standards are
reasonable or unreasonable in order to
apply
them
to concrete situations and issues.
The ultimate aim of ethics
is to develop a body of
moral
standards
that we feel are reasonable
to hold--standards that we have
thought about carefully
and
have
decided are justified
standards for us to accept and
apply to the choices that fill
our lives.
Ethics
is not the only way to
study morality. The social
sciences--such as anthropology,
sociology,
and psychology--also study morality,
but do so in a way that is
quite different from
the
approach to morality that is
characteristic of ethics. Although
ethics is a
normative study
of
ethics,
the social sciences engage
in a
descriptive study of
ethics.
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