Lecture 1: Part 2 - Market Ethics and Roles in business ethics Flashcards

1
Q

What are the three key features of the market system?

A

1) Private ownership, profit motive and volountary exchange
2) Rights based utilitarianism
3) Invisible hand argument

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2
Q

What is rights based utilitarianism?

A

The notion that the welfare of society can be improved by promoting efficiency

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3
Q

What did adam smith’s Invisible Hand argument state

A

The benefit to society of the market system is not due to the concern of the well-being of others, but soley due to self interest

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4
Q

What are the three issues in relation to the invisible hand argument?

A

1) Market failures
2) Collective choice and public goods
3) Prisoners dilemma

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5
Q

What are market ethics

A

Ethical rules that apply in imperfect markets

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6
Q

What do market ethics relate to? (four agrees)

A

1) Breaches of agreements or contracts
2) Fraud
3) Wrongful harm
4) Acting responsibly

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7
Q

What is fraud?

A

Material representation made with an intent to deceive that causes harm to a party that reasonably relies on it

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8
Q

What are the four primary reasons for market failures?

A

1) No perfect competition - given the existence of monopolies
2) No perfect rationality - people lack the ability to gather and process information to act in their own interests, and also human motivation is complex
3) Existence of externalises- efficiency argument assumes that there are no spillovers, and all costs of production are reflected in price of goods - not the case and often left to governments
4) Collective choice - left to a few individuals - rationality is that each individual will make choices to maximise their own welfare, and therefore the choice will be rational and benefit society as a whole

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9
Q

What are the features of public goods and what issue are they prone to - in relation to collective choice

A

Not rival or excludable - subject to free rider problem - if everyone acts in their own interest, everyone would be a free rider in relation to public goods, as there is not profit - issue is therefore left to governmnet

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10
Q

What is the message behind the prisoners dilemma? What is the solution usually to a prisoner dilemma?

A

Rational collective choice can only be made if each person in a system of cooperative behaviour can be convinced that others will act in the same way.
Solution = government intervention

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11
Q

What are the two most important roles in business relationships?

A

Agent and fiduciary

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12
Q

What is the role of the agent?

A

Engaged to act on behalf of the principal, and the agent becomes an extension of the principle and will act solely for their benefit

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13
Q

What is the role of fiduciary?

A

Entrusted with the care of another’s property or assets and has a responsibility to exercise discretionary judgement in this capacity solely in the other person’s interests.

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14
Q

What is the fiduciary duty? What are the three elements of the fiduciary duty?

A

Duty of a person who is the fiduciary to act solely in the interests of the beneficiary, without gaining any material benefit or knowledge. Three elements:

  • Candor: Duty to disclose all information relevant
  • Care: Manage what is trusted with due care
  • Loyalty: Act in beneficiaries interest, and not own interests
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15
Q

What is ethical reasoniing?

A
  • Identification of ethical concepts and principles

- Intellectual procedure for justifying ethical judgement

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16
Q

What are the three levels, and six stages in Kohlberg’s stages of ethical reasoning?
What does his theory say in relation to ethical reasoning?

A

Levels:
Level 1: Pre-conventional morality
> Stage 1: Obedience and punishment orientation
> Stage 2: Self- interest orientation
Level 2: Conventional morality
> Stage 3: Good interpersonal relations
> Stage 4: Authority and social order orientation
Level 3: Post-conventional morality
> Stage 5: Social contract and individual rights orientation
> Stage 6: Universal principle orientation

17
Q

What occurs in the stages?

A

Level 1: Pre-conventional level
> Stage 1: Infants are concerned only with the avoidance of punishment
> Stage 2: Infants are concerned with the pursuit of their own welfare
Level 2: Conventional level
> Stage 3: Children seek to conform to the expectations of others
> Stage 4: Children understand the importance of rules and laws in enabling social order
Level 3: Post- conventional level
> Stage 5: Adults develop the cognitive ability to understand morality as a social contract that facilitates cooperation
> Stage 6: Engage in principled ethical reasoning, where rights and justice are recognised, on the basis of morality

18
Q

What is the boatright framework? What are the 7 principles and concepts?

A

Boatright framework identified the relevant concepts and principles, not rules, for ethical reasoning

1) Welfare - welfare should be promoted, and any infliction of harm requires moral justification
2) Duty Moral requirement to act in a certain way - something we ought to do
3) Rights - Entitlement whereby a person is due certain treatment from others
4) Fairness - Equal treatment or different treatment according to justified principal
5) Honesty - can be regarded as a duty, basic ethical principal to be upfront and not lie
6) Dignity - all people deserve respect as human beings
7) Integrity - denotes a person of character or virtue, who holds the right values

19
Q

What did the ultimatum bargining game find?

A
  • Found that were the second player chooses to either accept or reject the proposed split amount.
  • Found that where the experiment is conducted by members of a social group that know each other, splits of less than 30% are rejected.
20
Q

What are the two reasons people are likely to reject offfers less than 50%? What does the game illustrate in relation to ethics?

A

Two reasons
- Altruistic punishment: rejects offers to teach the first player a lesson and thereby reduce the likelihood the player will make the unfair offer again in the future
- Self- control: rejections constitute a failure to inhibit a desire to punish the other player for making an unfair offer.
Ethics link: unwillingness to accept injustice. The tendency to refuse small offers may be seen as relevant to the concept of ‘honour’