Chapter 5: Ethics, Corporate Social Responsibility, and Sustainability
Corporate Moral Obligations
Noblesse oblige - honorable and benevolent behavior that is the responsibility of successful companies J&J has an existing deal with South African group Aspen Pharmacare, which makes Prezista at a discounted price of $2.22 for Africa - a fraction of he western market place
Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR)
Refers to the idea that managers should consider the social consequences of economic actions when making decisions Out of 34 million HIV positive people - 69% live in sub Saharan Africa Johnson & Johnson is deepening its business in Africa, adding new research, development and distribution capabilities to boost sales of new medicine to fight HIV/AIDS and other major killer diseases
Ethical Strategy
a strategy, or course of action, that does not violate these accepted principles
Environmental Pollution
Host country regulations are inferior - one of the perspectives on why globalization is unsavory
Factors contributing to unethical behavior
Personal ethics, decision-making processes, organization culture, unrealistic performance expectations, leadership, societal culture
Organization Culture
can legitimize unethical behavior or reinforce the need for ethical behavior
Personal Ethics
the generally accepted principles of right and wrong governing the conduct of individuals — expatriates may face pressure to violate their personal ethics because they are away from their ordinary social context and supporting culture — managers fail to question whether a decision or action is ethical, and instead rely on economic analysis when making decisions
Decision-making processes
the values and norms that are shared among employees of an organization
Ethical Issues
Employment practices, human rights, environmental, pollution, corruption
Ethics
Accepted principles of right or wrong that govern — the conduct of a person — the members of a profession — the actions of an organization
Business Ethics
accepted principles of right or wrong governing the conduct of business people
Employment Practices
12 hour work day (Nike), child labor, working conditions
Ethical Dilemmas
Situations in which none of the available alternatives seems ethically acceptable — real-world decisions are complex, difficult to frame, and involve consequences that are difficult to qualify — ethical obligations of an MNE (multinational enterprise) toward employment conditions, human rights, corruption, environmental pollution, and the use of power are not always clear cut
Human Rights
South Africa, Apartheid still lingers