Lecture 1: Part 1 - Ethics and the world of business Flashcards

1
Q

What are the two principles for moral reasoning?

A

1) Consequantalist

2) Categorical

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2
Q

What does the consequentialist principle state?

What about the categorical principal?

A

The morality of an action is dependent on the CONSEQUENCE of the action
The morality of an action depends on the intrinsic quality of the act

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3
Q

Who is a business’ loyalty owed to?

A
Shareholders (fiduciary relationship) 
Customers 
Suppliers 
employers 
Government 
Society
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4
Q

What are the three levels of decision making?

A

1) Individual - relies on our own moral, standards and judgement
2) Organisation- replies on policies and procedures
3) Business systems - industry code of ethics, government regulation and economic reform (these are SYSTEMATIC PROBLEMS)

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5
Q

What are some solutions to systematic problems?

A

Ethical displacement (addressing the issue at a different level than it occurs), industry wide ethical standards, reforms

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6
Q

What happened in the Home Depot Case?

A

Hurricane struct, damaged homes, and in the devastation, prices for necessities and basic building materials prices were increased

  • Home Depot initially kept prices consistent
  • When wholesalers raised their prices - started selling at cost
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7
Q

What are the three perspectives in relation to business and ethics?

A

Law, economics, ethics and morality

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8
Q

What is the relationship between economics and ethics?

A

Utility maximisation - by perusing profit, businesses promote the welfare of society as a whole

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9
Q

What is the issue for the economics argument?

A

Assumes perfect markets (fully competitive, moral restraints to prevent theft, fraud)

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10
Q

What are the two schools of though in relation to ethics and law?

A

1) Conducting business within the laws is enough: Law sets the minimum standard, ethics are personal and optional
2) The law embodies the ethics of business

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11
Q

Why is the first school (conducing business within the laws enough and ethics are personal) not true?

A
  • Ethics is applicable in the public realm - business practices can be unethical
  • Not everything that is legal is moral
  • The law incorporates concepts that are not easily defined
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12
Q

Why is the second school of thought (law embodies the ethics of business) not true?

A
  • The law does not embody ethics (undeveloped legal systems, and no legal system can embrace the whole of morality)
  • Law is slow to develop
  • law is often unsettled
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13
Q

What is morality and ethics?

What is the difference between morality and ethics?

A

What are they? Both are a description of human behaviour as wright or wrong
Morality: existence of rules and standards in society, specific to times, places and culture
Ethics: the philosophical study of morality

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14
Q

What are the three reasons why individuals ethical mistakes?

A

1) Work in environment where they lack strong guidance and receive conflicting signals
2) Prone to rationalisation and can persuade themselves that a course of action is right in the circumstances
3) Psychological tendencies (biases and heursitics) that create poor decision making?

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15
Q

What do biases do? What are the 10 we studies?

A

Biases: Shift our decisions in one direction or another

  • Loss aversion:
  • Framing effect
  • Confirmation bias
  • Cognigative dissonance
  • Commitment and sunk costs
  • Hindsight bias
  • Causation Bias and Illusion of control
  • Overoptimism and overconfidence
  • Self interest
  • Risk perception bias
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16
Q

Explain the 10 biases

A
  • Loss aversion: weigh losses more heavily than gains
  • Framing effect: decisions are based on how situations are framed
  • Confirmation bias: seek facts that confirm our existing beliefs
  • Cognitive dissonance: Dismissing info that would disrupt their beliefs and attitudes
  • Commitment and sunk costs: means people tend to persist in a course of action, even in light of new information
  • Hindsight bias; people believe events are more predictable than they are
  • Causation Bias and Illusion of control: People find casual patterns in random events - believe they are more controllable
  • Overoptimism and overconfidence - people are overly confident in their own ideas
  • Self interest - people act in their own interests
  • Risk perception bias - people make poor judgements about risk
17
Q

What are heuristics?

What are the three that we have studied?

A

Rules of thumb methods that are applied in reasoning

1) Anchoring heuristic: Make an initial choice, and adjust in response to additional information, however final decision heavily impacted by our initial choices
2) Representativeness heuristic: Tenancy to use recent and vivid examples, rather than data
3) Availability heuristic: Make decisions based on available information, rather than new information

18
Q

What are the four reasons for errors in organisational decision making?

A

1) Decisions are made over time
2) Resulting commitments are difficult to stop
3) Difffusion of information
4) Fragmentation of responsibility

19
Q

What are the three types of justice that aristotle identified?

A

1) Distributive justice - deals with the distributions of benefits and burdens
2) Compensatory justice - is a matter for compensating persons for wrongs done to them
3) Retributive justice - punishment of wrongdoers

20
Q

What are the 5 stages of the markkula framework?

A

1) Recognise an ethical issue
2) Get the facts
3) Evaluate alternative decisions
4) Make a decision and test it
5) Evaluate and reflect on the outcome in your