Business Ethics Chapter 2
economic
maximizing stakeholder wealth and/or value
corporate governance
provides formalized responsibility to stakeholders
issues in social responsibility
social issues, consumer protection, sustainability, corporate governance
FSGO
Federal sentencing guidelines for organizations
directors and officers of corporations
fiduciaries for the shareholders
philanthropic
giving back to society
three aproaches to stakeholder theory
normative, descriptive, and instrumental
communities
When individual stakeholders share similar expectations about desirable business conduct, they may choose to organize into >>>?
legal
abiding all laws and government regulations
outside directors
are hired as they do not have vested interests
primary stakeholders
are those whose continued association is necessary for a firm's survival (employees, customers, investors, and stockholders. governments and communities that provide necessary infrastructure).
steps to implementing a stakeholder perspective
assessing the corporate culture identifying stakeholder groups and issues assessing organizational commitment to social responsibility identifying resources and determining urgency
stakeholders
customers, investors and shareholders, employees, suppliers. government agencies, communicties, and others who have a "stake" or claim in some aspect of a company's products, operations, markets, industry, and outcomes
accountability
degree to which workplace decisions align with a firms goals and its compliance with ethical and legal considerations
instrumental approach
describes what will happen if firms behave in a particular way
`Secondary stakeholders
do not typically engage in transactions and are not essential for its survival (the media, trade associations, and special - interest groups)
steps of social responsibility
economic , legal, ethical, philanthropic
four levels of social responsibility
economic, legal, ethical, and philanthropic
stakeholders power over business
ethical misconduct can damage a firm's reputation, causing stakeholder's to withdraw valuable resources
descriptive approach
focueses on the actual behavior of the firm and usually addresses how decisions and strategies are made for stakeholder relationships
ethical
following standards of acceptable behavior as judged by stakeholders
shareholder model
goal maximize wealth for investors and owners focusses on developing and improving the formal system for maintaining performance accountability between top management and shareholders
normative approach
identifies ethical guildelines that dicate how firms ought to treat stakeholders. Principles and values provide direction
stakeholder interaction model
indicates taht there are two way relationships between the firm and a host of stakeholders
business ethics
involves carefully though out rules or heuristics of business conducts that guide decision making
social responsibility
is an organizations obligation to maximize its positive impact on stakeholders and minimize negative impacts. it can be viewed as a contract with society
corporate citizenship
is often used to express the extent to which businesses strategically meet the economic, legal, ethical and philanthropic responsibilities placed on them by their various stakeholders
a stake holder orientations is not complete until
it includes the activities that address stakeholder issues
responsive process of a stakeholder orientation
may involve the participation of the concerned stakeholder groups.
reputation
one of an organizations greatest intangible assets with tangible value. the value of a positive reputation is difficult to quantify, but is very important
corporate governance establishes systems and processes for
preventing and detecting misconduct, investiagting and disciplining, recovery and continuous improvement
stakeholders two categories
primary and secondary
difference between primary stakeholders and secondary stakeholders
primary groups may present more day to day concerns, secondary groups cannot be ignored or given less consideration in the ethical decision making process
board of directors
responsbile for the ethics of a firms actions assume ultimate authority for their organizations effectiveness and subsequent performance governed by the amendments fo the federal sentencing guidelines for organizations
friedman's view
stakeholders do not have any role in requiring businesses to demonstrate responsbile and ethical behavior
four interrelated dimensions of corporate citizenship
strong sustained economic performance ,rigorous compliance, ethical actions beyond what the law requires, voluntary contributions that advance the reputation and stakeholder commitment of the organization
stakeholders provide these two things
tangible and intangible resources
stakeholder orientation
the degree to which a firm understands and addresses stakeholder demands; involves activities and processes wihtin a system of social institutions that faciliate and maintain value through exchange relationships with multiple stakeholders
second set of activities for a stakeholder orientation
the distribution of this informtion through the firm
first set of activities for a stakeholder orientation
the organization wide generation of data about stakeholder groups and assessment of the firms effects of these groups
third set of activities for a stakeholder orientation
the organization's responsiveness as a whole to this intelligence
adam smiths view
values that a firm should adopt to produce in a more socially responsible way correlates with the needs and concerns of the stakeholders
stakeholders values and standards
working conditions, consumer rights, enviromental conservations, product safety, and proper information disclosure: that may not directly affect an individual stakeholder's own welfare
interlocking directorate
board member linked to more than one company
stakeholder model
company is answerable to its stakeholders, promotes stakeholder welfare along with corporate needs and interests
executive compensations
compensations paid to top executives of the company ratio between the salaries of the highest paid executives and the median employee wage should be less