Ethics CHP 1-4
_____ is the offering of something of value in order to gain an illicit advantage.
Bribery
_____ law defines the rights and duties of individuals and organizations (including businesses).
Civil
Which of the following is a major ethical concern among corporate boards of directors?
Compensation
What type of fraud involves intentional deception on the part of an individual or group in order to derive an unfair economic advantage over an organization?
Consumer
_____ focus(es) on developing sound organizational practices and integrity for financial and nonfinancial performance measures, rather than on an individual's morals.
Core practices
_____ law not only prohibits specific actions in business such as fraud, theft, or securities trading violations, but also imposes fines or imprisonment as punishment for breaking the law.
Criminal
Which of the following are not typically secondary stakeholders?
Customers
____________ must be trusted to make business work properly and includes accountants.
Gatekeepers
Which of the following is not a side-effect of being the victim of workplace bullying?
Increased productivity
Concerns involving copyright infringement on books, movies and music, and other illegally produced goods relate to which type of ethical issue?
Intellectual property rights
The term business ethics is best described by the following statement:
It comprises the principles, values, and standards that guide behavior in the world of business.
Abusive or intimidating behavior is the most common ethical problem for employees. Which of the following is not related to this concept?
Performance probation
_____ is the synergistic and mutually beneficial use of an organization's core competencies and resources to deal with key stakeholders so as to bring about organizational and societal benefits.
Strategic philanthropy
Why is the public more tolerant of consumer misconduct than business misconduct?
There are big differences in wealth and success between businesses and consumers.
Why is it important for businesses to recognize secondary stakeholder groups?
They have legitimacy and can exert power.
Which of the following are not typically primary stakeholders?
Trade associations
_____ responsibilities relate to a business's contributions to stakeholders.
Voluntary
How do violations of the law usually start?
When businesspeople stretch the limits of ethical standards
The degree to which a firm understands and addresses stakeholder demands can be referred to as
a stakeholder orientation.
Optimization is defined as
a trade-off between equity and efficiency.
Stakeholders' power over businesses stems from their
ability to withdraw or withhold resources
Ethical culture is defined as
acceptable behavior as defined by the company and industry.
Conflicts of interest exist when employees must choose whether to
advance their own personal interests, those of the organization, or those of some other group.
Business ethics is a part of decision making
at all levels of work and management.
The term used to express how a firm meets its stakeholder expectations of its economic, legal, ethical, and philanthropic responsibilities is
corporate citizenship.
Which of the following describes the four levels of social responsibility?
economic, legal, ethical, and philanthropic
Values are
enduring beliefs and ideals that are socially enforced.
Issues related to fairness and honesty may arise because business is sometimes regarded as a
game governed by its own rules rather than those of society.
The _____ of ethics involves embedding values, norms, and artifacts in organizations, industries, and society.
institutionalization
Investors are concerned about business ethics because they know that misconduct can
lower stock value and prices.
The purpose of a stakeholder orientation is to
maximize positive outcomes that meet stakeholder needs.
When a commercial states that a product is superior to any other on the market, the marketer risks accusations of
puffery
Morals...
relate to you and you alone.
An ethical issue is a problem, situation, or opportunity
requiring an individual, group, or organization to choose among several actions that must be evaluated as right or wrong, ethical or unethical.
Many people wrongly assume that a company will be ethical if it
simply hires ethical employees
Principles are
specific and pervasive boundaries for behavior that are universal and absolute.
Those who have a claim in some aspect of a firm's products, operations, markets, industry, and outcomes are known as
stakeholders.
The study of business ethics is important to better understand all of the following except
that business ethics is entirely an extension of an individual's own personal ethics.
Donation of computer equipment to schools by Toshiba would be associated with _____ responsibilities.
voluntary
This is a leading self-regulatory body that provides directions for managing customer disputes and reviews advertising cases.
Better Business Bureau