Ethics Final - Chapter 17
Integrated supplier scorecards rate suppliers on multiple dimensions: *Traditional - such as ? *Newer - such as ?
*cost, quality, and timelines *social, ethical, and environmental performance
Firms invest in supplier social responsibility in order to:
- Create a positive customer image and enhance brand equity - Reduce costs - Satisfy government regulations - Avoid disruptions - Increase sales - Allay public criticism
Reasons a company might not switch suppliers:
1) A supplier may have critical capabilities. 2) The lead firm may feel a moral obligation to the workers and local community not to cause job loss. 3) Other suppliers may not be readily available to take over the contract.
Impacts of Supply chain transparency:
1) Can enhance brand loyalty among consumers concerned about social, ethical, and environmental responsibility. 2) Technology increasingly makes this possible at the point of purchase. 3) Consumers can see how and where a product was made in startling detail.
Top 3 social and environmental responsibility issues that are most important?
1) Health and safety 2) Ethical issues 3) Product integrity
Choices in carrying out a supply chain audit:
1) Internal audit 2) External audit or a third-party audit
Reasons for Private Regulation
1) Lack of jurisdiction of home country governments 2) Weak regulatory capacity in developing countries 3) Limited enforcement power of transnational institutions
Private governance is most likely to emerge in global supply chains under several conditions:
1) Large lead firms have leverage over smaller suppliers 2) Firms and products have highly visible brands *Therefore more vulnerable damaging their reputation 3) Civil society is exerting pressure for responsible practices *example = Campaigns, boycotts, or shareholder resolutions 4) A strong business case can be made for social and environmental responsibility.
Most suppliers share an interest in obtaining orders that will enable them to:
1) Make money 2) Use their productive capacity efficiently 3) Build long-term, stable relationships with business customers
Drawbacks of audits:
1) On-site inspections are expensive and time-consuming *therefore cannot be scaled to cover a brand's entire supply chain. 2) Audits are not always unannounced *in many cases, suppliers receive advance notice and are able to stage conditions to pass the inspection. 3) Workers sometimes distrust auditors, not knowing if the inspectors represent the supplier, the brand, or an independent third party *therefore are reluctant to share their experiences.
Nike has introduced a Manufacturing Index which measures and rewards suppliers on four dimensions:
1) Quality 2) On-time delivery 3) Cost 4) Sustainability
Three key issues in global supply chains:
1) Social issues 2) Ethical issues 3) Environmental issues
Business challenges in global supply chains are:
1) To assure that their suppliers pay wages that are perceived as fair 2) To permit workers and their families to achieve a decent standard of livingTerms and conditions of work varies across cultures and economies 3) Finding the right balance can be a challenge (should overtime be permitted) 4) Child labor 5) Worker health and safety in supplier factories
Supplier development may take several forms:
1) Training 2) Joint problem-solving 3) Investing in equipment or infrastructure
Lead Firm Responses to Supply Chain Audits of Social, Ethical, and Environmental Performance:
1. Shared Value 2. Capability Building 3. Monitoring and Remediation
Supplier development
Activities undertaken by companies to improve the performance of firms in their supply chains.
Supplier
An organization that provides goods or services to another organization.
_______________________________________ when a supplier of raw materials, parts, or finished goods contributes to climate change, dumps toxic chemicals, emits air pollution, or reduces biodiversity *This can threaten the reputation of companies at the top of the supply chain.
Environmental issues arise
Example of companies have invested directly in improving the lives and professional skills of their suppliers' workers?
Gap Inc., the apparel retailer, supports a program called Personal Advancement and Career Enhancement, or P.A.C.E.
_______________________________________ among them are the wages, working conditions, and health and safety of employees in supplier factories
Global supply chains have many social impacts
Tier-1 suppliers (sometimes called contractors)
Hired to manufacture products and provide them directly to the company. These may in turn work with
Supply Chain
The multiple steps involved in the movement of a product or service from the most distant supplier to the customer.
Suppliers are an important market stakeholder of business because?
They provide critical inputs. They often manufacture entire products that companies then sell to customers under their own brand.
[True / False] Due to complexity firms sometimes refer to their supply webs or networks, rather than use the term supply chain, which implies a simple, linear relationship
True
[True / False] A company will terminate a supplier, if the supplier is unwilling to change or the deficiencies are egregious. *48% of companies in a recent survey said they would terminate a supplier in certain cases if violations were found.
True
[True / False] A supplier that is a sole source for a key component or natural resource naturally has more leverage than one which is not.
True
[True / False] As the manufacturing supply chain has become increasingly globalized, its regulation has become more fragmented and ineffective.
True
[True / False] Companies have developed organizational mechanisms to resolve differences in priorities internally, and tried to communicate expectations more clearly to suppliers.
True
[True / False] In the absence of effective public regulation, many companies and industries have established rules for their suppliers through their own voluntary supply chain codes of conduct.
True
[True / False] Lead firms decide to engage in capability-building because the cost of switching suppliers may be too high
True
[True / False] Most audits turn up at least some instances in which a company's global operations are not in compliance.
True
[True/ False] Private regulation is also called private governance
True
[True / False] Transnational companies that depend on resources that are farmed, extracted, or mined are particularly at risk for human rights abuses by their suppliers
True *A specific human rights challenge in global supply chains is sourcing minerals and other valuable commodities from conflict zones.
Sweatshops
a derogatory term referring to factories where workers toil long hours, at low wages, and under unsafe conditions
Companies that set up operations in countries with ___________________ , repressive regimes can be caught up in violations of human rights. *Some governments require foreign firms to partner with state-owned companies in order to do business there, adding another ____________-
anti-democratic , level of risk
A lead firm may choose instead to invest time and resources to build the supplier's _________________ rather than ____________ a supplier.
capabilities , punish
Private regulation often takes the form of ____________ and _______________ codes of conduct
company , industry-wide
Internal audit
company hires and trains its own staff of auditors whose job is to inspect factories to determine whether or not they are in compliance.
disadvantage of an external audit (third-party)
company may find that the information is delayed, and it does not directly control the quality of the audit.
Root cause analysis
determine the underlying cause of repeated violations of particular code requirements or standards
Impact on stock prices of ______________________________ will adversely impact operating income, return on sales, and return on assets and firms did not recover quickly
disruptions in companies' supply chains
Suppliers may have both _____________ and ______________ power.
economic , informational
[Supplier Development and Capability Building] Capability-building initiatives work best where interactions between buyer and supplier are ______________ and _________________.
frequent , ongoing
Crowd-sourced audit
gathers information about factory conditions directly from workers using their mobile phones. *workers provide information directly by responding to questions generated by a recorded voice on their mobile phones when they are away from work
External Audit (third-party)
hire another organization to carry out the audit and report back to the company
Common standards improve ________________ , since suppliers are not faced with myriad ________________________
improve , conflicting demands
Advantage of an external audit (third-party)
it is often perceived by stakeholders as more objective and credible.
Some companies have responded to environmental concerns by ________________ and __________________
local sourcing , improve efficiency in their supply chains
Tier-2 suppliers (sometimes called subcontractors)
may in turn work with even more distant suppliers
Common standards reduce the costs of _______________ since brands can share audit results.
monitoring
Supply Chain Auditing
monitors a supplier's performance to determine if it is in compliance with the relevant code of conduct.
Private regulation occurs when companies set ___________________ for themselves and their business partners.
rules of behavior
Local sourcing
seeking to source from nearby suppliers where practical
Companies are working together to audit major suppliers and to _____________
share results
Research shows that when companies invest in suppliers and their employees, exchange knowledge, and collaborate on improvements, they create _________________ that benefits _____________
shared value , both parties
[Supplier Development and Capability Building] Suppliers are more likely to engage when lead firms are prepared to offer them _______________ and ______________ contracts.
stable , long-term
Disadvantage of an internal audit
stakeholders might view reports based on an internal audit as less credible because the company would have an interest in casting itself and its suppliers in a favorable light.
Advantage of an internal audit
the company controls and manages the process. It can determine what factories need to be audited, and learn immediately about any problems uncovered.
Lead firms often categorize their suppliers according to ________, or _______.
tier , level
Suppliers are also known as ____________ or ______________
vendors , contractors
When does audit fatigue occur?
when supplier factories must endure audit after audit conducted by different buyers.
Example of companies and industries that have established rules for their suppliers through their own voluntary supply chain codes of conduct.
Levi Strauss, a U.S. apparel maker
_________________ are one of the main reasons that brands contract with suppliers in developing countries.
Low wages *They reduce overall costs and enable brands to price their products more competitively. *Low wages are not necessarily unethical.
Human trafficking
Modern-day slavery—the illegal recruitment and movement of people against their will, usually to exploit them for economic gain
Private Regulation of the Business - Supplier Relationship
New institutions have arisen to fill the void created by the inability of governments in both developed and developing countries to police the far-flung operations of large transnational corporations and their global supply chains.
Private regulation
Non-governmental institutions that govern, enable and constrain economic activities
supply chain transparency
Occurs when a company's supply chain is fully disclosed to its stakeholders.
Example of Human trafficking
Of the estimated 2.5 million victims of trafficking in the world, about 80 percent are women and girls forced into prostitution
Example of supply chain auditing being used to spare companies from duplicating efforts and incurring unnecessary costs?
Sustainable Compliance Initiative (SCI)
An example of a current trend in Common Industry-wide Standards?
The Electronics Industry Citizenship Coalition Code of Conduct
Example of major transnational firms can have an enormous number of suppliers?
Intel has 16,000 suppliers in 100 countries
Example of a crowd-sourced audit
LaborVoices