Ethical Issues in IB
Ethical Issues in IB
Ethical Issues in IB
International Business
T.J. Joseph
Introduction
• Ethics refers to accepted principles of right or wrong
that govern the conduct of a person, the members of
a profession, or the actions of an organization
• Often a function of differences in economic
development, politics, legal systems, and culture
• Certain practices in one country may be unethical
when judged by other countries (Western) standards
• Most common ethical issues involve employment
practices, human rights, environmental regulations,
corruption, and the moral obligation of MNCs
Source and Nature of Ethical Issues
EMPLOYMENT PRACTICES
• When work conditions in a host nation are clearly
inferior to those in a multinational’s home nation, what
standards should be applied—those of the home nation,
those of the host nation, or something in between?
• Examples: Apple iPode and Hongfujin in China; Nike in
Vietnam; Levi Strauss and Tan family China
• International business implications: Establish minimal
acceptable working standards and audit foreign
subsidiaries and subcontractors on a regular basis
Source and Nature of Ethical Issues
HUMAN RIGHTS
• Rights that we take for granted in developed nations,
such as freedom of association, freedom of speech,
freedom of assembly, freedom of movement, freedom
from political repression, and so on, are by no means
universally accepted
• Examples: South Africa until 1994; China’s human rights
record; Myanmar (formally known as Burma); Royal
Dutch Shell in Nigeria
• What is the responsibility of an MNC when operating in
a country where basic human rights are violated?
Should the company be there at all?
Source and Nature of Ethical Issues
ENVIRONMENTAL POLLUTION
• Ethical issues arise when environmental regulations in
host nations are inferior to those in the home nation.
• Should a multinational feel free to pollute in a developing
nation?
• ‘tragedy of the commons’ occurs when individuals
overuse a resource held in common by all (Garrett Hardin)
• Examples: foreign oil companies in Nigeria; Coca Cola
plant in Kerala
Source and Nature of Ethical Issues
CORRUPTION
“corruption has been a problem in almost every society in
history, and it continues to be one today.”
• Corruption is bad, and it may harm a country’s economic
development, but there are also cases where payments
to government officials can remove the bureaucratic
barriers to investments that create jobs
– Examples: Bofors case; Enron; Lockheed case in US
• The US Foreign Corrupt Practices Act of 1977
• Convention on Combating Bribery of Foreign Public Officials in
International Business Transactions (OECD, 1997)
Source and Nature of Ethical Issues
MORAL OBLIGATIONS
• Social responsibility for MNCs to give something back to
the societies that enable them to prosper and grow.
• Example: BP, company policy to undertake “social
investments” in the countries where it does business
• Sometimes multinationals may abuse their power for
private gain
• Example: the British East India Company (1600)
Source and Nature of Ethical Issues
Ethical Dilemmas
• What is the accepted ethical principle in international
business perspective?
• Argument 01: ethical depends upon one’s cultural
perspective.
– American and European views on capital punishment; Gift
giving practices viewed in Asian and Western nations
• Ethical dilemmas —they are situations in which none of
the available alternatives seems ethically acceptable
– Employing child labor was not acceptable, but neither was
denying the child his/her only source of income
Determinants of Ethical Behavior
Why do managers behave in an unethical manner?
Determinants of Ethical Behavior
PERSONAL ETHICS
• Personal ethical code exerts a profound influence on
business ethics
• An individual with a strong sense of personal ethics is
less likely to behave in an unethical manner in a business
setting.
• Personal ethics comes from sources like our parents, our
schools, our religion, and the media.
Determinants of Ethical Behavior
DECISION-MAKING PROCESSES
• People simply forget that business decisions may also
have an important ethical dimension.
• Most often ethical considerations are not incorporated
into business decision making
• Example: Pfizer’s Drug Testing Strategy in Nigeria; Nike’s
subcontracting decision
Determinants of Ethical Behavior
ORGANIZATION CULTURE
• Business climate sometimes do not encourage people to
think through the ethical consequences of business
decisions
• All decisions are purely economic in nature (profit
maximization)
– Example: Case of former Enron CEO Kenneth Lay