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Business
Ethics MGT610
VU
LESSON
24
OLIGOPOLIES
AND PUBLIC POLICY
1. Is
the offer of a payment
initiated by the payer (the
one who pays the money), or
does
the
payee (the one who receives
the money) demand the
payment by threatening
injury
to
the payer's interests? In the latter
case, the payment is not a
bribe but a form of
extortion.
If the threatened injury is
large enough, the payer
may not be morally
responsible
for his or her act, or
the moral responsibility may
at least be diminished.
2.
Is the payment made to
induce the payee to act in a
manner that violates his or
her
official
sworn duty to act in the
best interests of the
public? Or is the payment
made to
induce
the payee to perform what is
already his or her official
duty? If the payee is
being
induced to violate his or
her official duty, then
the payer is cooperating in
an
immoral
act because the payee has
entered an agreement to fulfill these
duties.
3.
Are the nature and purpose of
the payment considered ethically
unobjectionable in the
local
culture? If a form of payment is a
locally accepted public
custom and there is a
proportionately
serious reason for making
the payment, then it would
appear to be
ethically
permissible on utilitarian
grounds.
Oligopolies
and Public Policy
What
should society do in the face of
the high degree of market
concentration in oligopolistic
industries?
There are three main
points of view:
First,
the Do-Nothing
view claims
that the power of
oligopolies is not as large as it
appears.
Though
competition within industries
has declined, they maintain
that competition
between
industries
with substitutable products
has replaced it. In addition,
there are
"countervailing
powers"
of other large corporate
groups, the government, and
unions that keep
corporations in
check.
Finally, they argue that
bigger is better, especially in
the current age of
global
competition.
Economies of scale, produced by high
concentration, actually lower prices
for
consumers.
Second,
the antitrust
view argues
that prices and profits in highly
concentrated industries
are
higher
than they should be. By
breaking up large corporations
into smaller units, they
claim,
higher
levels of competition will emerge in
those industries. The result will be a
decrease in
collusion,
greater innovation, and lower prices.
Clearly, the antitrust view
is based on a number
of
assumptions. J. Fred Weston has
summarized the basic
propositions on which this
traditional
view
is based:
1.
If an industry is not atomistic
with many small competitors,
there is likely to be
administrative
discretion over prices.
2.
Concentration results in recognized
interdependence among companies, with no
price
competition
in concentrated industries.
3.
Concentration is due mostly to mergers
because the most efficient
scale of operation is
not
more than 3 to 5 percent of
the industry. A high degree
of concentration is
unnecessary.
4.
There is a positive correlation
between concentration and profitability
that gives
evidence
of monopoly power in concentrated
industries--the ability to elevate
prices
and
the persistence of high
profits. Entry does not take
place to eliminate excessive
profits.
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Business
Ethics MGT610
VU
5.
Concentration is aggravated by product
differentiation and advertising.
Advertising is
correlated
with higher profits.
6.
There is oligopolistic coordination by
signaling through press
releases or other
means.
The
third view is the Regulation
view,
which can be seen as a middle
ground between the
other
two. Those who advocate
regulation do not wish to lose
the economies of scale offered
by
large
corporations, but they also
wish to ensure that large
firms do not harm the
consumers.
Therefore,
they suggest setting up
regulatory agencies and legislation to
control the activities
of
large
corporations. Some even
suggest that the government
should take over the
operation of
firms
where only public ownership
can guarantee that they operate in
the public interest.
Whichever
view we take, clearly the
social benefits of free
markets cannot be guaranteed, and
the
markets themselves cannot be
morally justified, unless
firms remain
competitive.
Ethic
& Environment
This
chapter on ethics and the
environment begins with some
rather sobering statistics
from the
World
watch Institute. This
includes population growth,
rising temperature, falling
water
tables,
shrinking cropland per person, collapsing
fisheries, shrinking forests, and
the loss of
plant
and animal species. Our
environment seems to be stressed
nearly to the breaking
point.
The
ethical and technological questions
that this state of affairs
raises are extremely
important
and
complex.
First,
there are still serious disagreements
about the extent of the
environmental damage
that
industrial
technology has produced.
Furthermore, there is no precise
way of knowing just
how
much
of a threat this environmental
damage will have for our
future welfare. And whatever
the
level
of damage, we must surely
sacrifice some values to
halt or slow it.
To
explore these issues, this
chapter begins with an overview of
the technical aspects
of
environmental
resource use. Then it moves to a
discussion of the ethical
basis of environmental
protection.
It concludes with a consideration of
our obligation to future generations and
the
prospects
for continued economic
expansion.
The
Dimensions of Pollution and Resource
Depletion
Environmental
damage inevitably threatens
the welfare of human beings as
well as plants and
animals.
Threats to the environment come
from two sources, pollution and resource
depletion.
Pollution
refers
to the undesirable and unintended
contamination of the environment by
the
manufacture
or use of commodities. Resource
depletion refers to
the consumption of finite
or
scarce
resources. In a certain sense, pollution
is really a type of resource depletion
because
contamination
of air, water, or land
diminishes their beneficial
qualities.
Air
pollution has
been with modern society
for nearly 200 years; its
costs are increasing
greatly.
It negatively affects agricultural
yields, human health, and
global temperatures.
The
result
is a large economic impact and a
staggering effect on the
quality of human
life.
Global
warming itself
poses a difficult and frightening
challenge. Global warming
greenhouse
gases
such as: carbon dioxide,
nitrous oxide, methane, and
chlorofluorocarbons, are gases
that
absorb
and hold heat from the sun,
preventing it from escaping back
into space, much like
a
greenhouse
absorbs and holds the sun's
heat. Most scenarios
concerning the effects of
global
warming
predict massive flooding, increase of
disease, loss of plant and animal
species, and
54
Business
Ethics MGT610
VU
expansion
of deserts at the expense of
agricultural land. These effects will
have high human
and
economic costs. However, to halt
the increase of greenhouse gasses, we
would have to
reduce
emissions by 60% to 70%, a level
that would damage the
economies of countries around
the
world. To halt global
warming, experts say that we
would need to change our
lifestyles and
values
drastically.
Ozone
depletion is also a serious
concern. Caused by the
release of CFCs into the
atmosphere,
ozone
depletion may lead to several
hundred thousand new cases
of skin cancer each year
and
destroy
many valuable food crops.
Also, ocean plankton, on
which the entire ocean's
food chain
depends,
may be severely damaged.
Even though CFC production
has been nearly halted,
we
can
expect the gasses already
released to continue damaging
the ozone for the
next century.
Burning
fossil fuels causes acid
rain and global warming. Though
not as devastating as
global
warming, it nevertheless is harming
many fish populations and
trees, corroding bridges
and
buildings, and contaminating drinking
water. Airborne toxins and
air quality in general
are
also
serious concerns for human
health.
Airborne
Toxics are
less catastrophic but highly
worrisome air pollution
threats; 2.4 billion
pounds
of airborne toxic substances
released annually into the
nation's atmosphere, including
phosgene,
a nerve gas used in warfare,
and methyl isocyanate.
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