Strategic Management And Business Policy : Globalization, Innovation And Sustainability, 15th Edition Solution Manual
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CHAPTER THREE
SOCIAL RESPONSIBILITY AND ETHICS IN STRATEGIC MANAGEMENT
The chapter examines the relationship between business firms and society and presents issues in social responsibility
and ethics. It describes the relationship between social responsibility and corporate performance. The chapter
considers stakeholder concerns and presents various responsibilities of business firms as well. Ethics and ethical
behavior are considered in light of the challenge from moral relativism. It describes guidelines for ethical behavior
according to utilitarianism, individual rights, and justice approaches.
LEARNING OBJECTIVES
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
Discuss the relationship between social responsibility and corporate performance.
Explain the concept of sustainability.
Conduct a stakeholder analysis.
Explain why people may act unethically.
Describe different views of ethics according to the utilitarian, individual rights, and justice approaches.
TOPICS OUTLINE COVERED
1. Social Responsibilities of Strategic Decision Makers
a. Responsibilities of a Business Firm
b. Sustainability
c. Corporate Stakeholders
2. Stakeholder Analysis
3. Ethical Decision Making
a. Some Reasons for Unethical Behavior
b. Encouraging Ethical Behavior
4. View on Ethical Behavior
SUGGESTED ANSWERS TO MYMANAGEMENTLAB QUESTIONS
3-1.
How has moral relativism led to criminal activities by some employees in companies?
Moral relativism suggests that morality is relative to some personal, social, or cultural standard. There is no method
for deciding whether one decision is better than another. For this very reason, many people justify their unethical
positions, arguing that there is not one absolute code of ethics.
3-2.
How does a company ensure that its code of ethics is integrated into the daily decision-making process
of the company and is not just a symbolic trophy or plaque hanging on the wall?
When management of a company wants to improve the ethical behavior of employees in the organization, a code of
ethics should be communicated in training programs, in performance appraisal systems, policies and procedures, and
also through their own actions.
SUGGESTED ANSWERS TO DISCUSSION QUESTIONS:
3-3.
What is the relationship between corporate governance and social responsibility?
This question is partially answered by the last trend in corporate governance presented in Chapter 2. Quite simply, it
states that society, in the form of special interest groups, increasingly expects boards of directors to balance the
economic goal of profitability with the social needs of society. Issues dealing with workforce diversity and the
environment are now reaching the board level. If business corporations are to avoid increased governmental
restrictions on their activities, management will need to be even more aware of the various needs of their stakeholder
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groups. The board of directors is in a unique position to view the corporation as a whole and to evaluate
managementโs performance in terms of stakeholder criteria. To the extent that boards use only shareholder value as
their key criteria, they may not be acting responsibly from societyโs point of view. Increasingly, concerns over social
responsibility may be directed through the board of directors. Agency theory defines the boardโs interests quite
narrowly. Perhaps it is time for agency theory to be expanded to include stakeholders other than just shareholders.
Stewardship theory may provide the rationale to expand the responsibilities of the board and top management in
terms of the corporationโs overall social responsibilities. This is likely to continue being a controversial issue for
quite some time.
3-4.
What is your opinion of Apple having a code of conduct for its suppliers? What would Milton
Friedman say? Contrast his view with that of Archie Carrollโs.
Do a companyโs responsibilities end at its boundary, or do its responsibilities extend to include its suppliers and
distributors? This very thorny question has become a point of contention in the area of social responsibility. The
question includes a basic question in organization theory: what is the boundary of an organization? Certainly, one
could argue that a company is composed of its employees and all of its assets, such as land, buildings, and
equipment. These can thus define a companyโs boundary. Given this view, everything else may be called a
companyโs โenvironmentโ and therefore outside of a companyโs control or responsibility. One could thus argue that
a company such as Apple or Nike cannot be held responsible for the actions of a separate and independent supplier
company/contractor. The very popularity of outsourcing as a substitute for vertical integration means that more
firms are contracting with other firms to fulfill functions a company no longer wishes to do on its own. If the
contract is long term in nature or if the purchasing company owns a substantial amount of stock in the supplying
company, then the hands-length nature of transactions is compromised and it becomes difficult to discern where one
firmโs boundary begins and another firmโs leaves off. Such a relationship suggests that one company does have
some influence over another companyโs actions by nature of the other companyโs dependency on the first company.
One could thus argue that a companyโs social responsibilities extend beyond what is normally thought of as its
boundary to the extent that it has some control and influence over the other companyโs actions. Clearly, Appleโs
management was thinking this way when it drafted its code of conduct.
Milton Friedman would probably be very much against Appleโs meddling with the rights of its suppliers to freely
contract with their employees. Using Carrollโs categories, Friedman would probably argue that the only
responsibilities of a business firm are economic and legal. Friedman does say that business should play โwithin the
rules of the game.โ This can be interpreted as meaning a supplierโs legal responsibilities to follow the rules
established within that country. If a purely economic justification is used, it may be difficult but still possible to
justify ethical and discretionary responsibilities. Carroll points out that a refusal to consider ethical responsibilities is
likely to lead to an increase in a firmโs legal responsibilitiesโwhich, considering the usual inefficiencies of
government, will lead to higher costs and lower long-run business efficiency. Either the U.S. federal government or
the United Nations may force companies in developed countries to follow a code like Gapโs or else face sanctions.
Friedman would say that this is foolishness, but Carroll would argue that this is a natural result of ignoring oneโs
ethical responsibilities.
3-5.
Does a company have to act selflessly to be considered socially responsible? For example, when
building a new plant, a corporation voluntarily invested in additional equipment that enabled it to
reduce its pollution emissions beyond any current laws. Knowing that it would be very expensive for
its competitors to do the same, the firm lobbied the government to make pollution regulations more
restrictive on the entire industry. Is this company socially responsible? Were its managers acting
ethically?
This is a tough question. At first, it seems to be more appropriate to a philosophy class than to a strategic
management class. Should motivation and attitudes be considered when judging a companyโs actions? The legal
system normally does this when differentiating between different degrees of guilt: intentionally killing is called
murder and is usually punished severely; unintentional killing is called homicide and may not be punished at all if it
is considered to be an accident or self-defense. Using this approach, one could say that a company is not socially
responsible unless its motives fit its actions. A counterargument could be made, however, by arguing that the
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essence of the free enterprise system is laissez-faire capitalism in which the selfish motivations of business people
result in a better society in terms of material goods. In this system, it is acceptable for a successful business firm to
selfishly work for its own good, given that its actions result in side effects that are functional for society as a whole.
We do not demand that a firm be altruistic when fulfilling its economic and legal responsibilities. Why should we
then require that a firm be altruistic when fulfilling its ethical and discretionary responsibilities? This is not the type
of question that pragmatic undergraduate business students are used to. Grad students will enjoy playing with the
concepts involved. This question could either result in some interesting class discussion or it could bomb. Hopefully,
it will make the class think on a higher level than simply regurgitating the book.
3-6.
Are people living in a relationship-based governance system likely to be unethical in business dealings?
The chapter states that developing nations tend to have relation-based governance. Transactions are based on
personal and implicit agreements, not on formal contracts enforceable by a court. Information about a business is
largely local and privateโthus cannot be easily verified by a third party. In contrast, rule-based governance relies on
publicly verifiable informationโthe type of information that is typically not available in a developing country. The
rule-based system has an infrastructure, based on accounting, auditing, ratings systems, legal cases, and codes, to
provide and monitor this information. If present in a developing nation, the infrastructure is not very sophisticated.
The relation-based system in a developing nation is inherently nontransparent due to the local and nonverifiable
nature of its information. A businessperson needs to develop and nurture a wide network of personal relations. In a
relation-based system, the culture of the country (and the founderโs family) strongly affects corporate culture and
business ethics. What is โfairโ depends upon whether one is a family member, a close friend, a neighbor, or a
stranger. Because behavior tends to be less controlled by laws and agreed-upon standards than by tradition, business
people from a rule-based developed nation perceive the relationship-based system in a developing nation to be less
ethical and more corrupt. In contrast, the people living in a relationship-based country see their behavior as
following what to them are well-known traditional guidelines and donโt necessarily understand why foreigners from
developed nations have such difficulty understanding how things are done. What is perceived by one person to be
corruption is simply how things are done in a developing nation.
3-7.
Given that people rarely use a companyโs code of ethics to guide their decision making, what good
are the codes?
The chapter states that managers tend to ignore codes of ethics and try to solve ethical dilemmas on their own. To
combat this tendency, corporations should not only develop a comprehensive code of ethics, but also communicate
the code in their training programs, performance appraisal systems, and policies and procedures. Developing codes
of ethics can be a useful way to promote ethical behavior, especially for people who are operating at Kohlbergโs
conventional level of moral development. A code of ethics (1) clarifies company expectations of employee conduct
in various situations and (2) makes clear that the company expects its people to recognize the ethical dimensions in
decisions and actions. If nothing else, developing and communicating a comprehensive code of ethics can help
protect a company from lawsuits.
ADDITIONAL DISCUSSION QUESTIONS FOR INSTRUCTORS
These are not found in the text and may be used by the instructor for classroom discussion or exams.
A3-1. How appropriate is the theory of laissez-faire in todayโs world?
As indicated in the chapter, Milton Friedman contends that it is very appropriate. The quote from his classic article,
โThe Social Responsibility of Business Is to Increase its Profitsโ does suggest a certain modification, however, to
pure laissez-faire. He states that business should work to increase its profits โso long as it stays within the rules of
the game, which is to say, engages in open and free competition without deception or fraud.โ These โrules of the
gameโ form the crux of the argument. What should these rules be and who should communicate and enforce them?
This leads directly into Archie Carrollโs contention that there are four responsibilities of business corporations:
economic, legal, ethical, and discretionary. Pure laissez-faire argues for economic responsibilities only. Friedman
modifies laissez-faire by presumably adding legal responsibilities. One could make the point that the โrules of the
gameโ should include ethical responsibilities as well. The problem, of course, is what happens to the concept of
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laissez-faire when one adds all these responsibilities to it and then expects businesspeople at all levels to accept
them without outside force? Does laissez-faire as proposed by Adam Smith and argued by others include only
economic responsibilities? If legal and ethical responsibilities are also expected by society of business corporations,
is it still โfree enterpriseโ laissez-faire or some other kind of system?
A3-2. Using Carrollโs list of four responsibilities, should a company be concerned about discretionary
responsibilities? Why or why not?
Except for a few die-hard followers of Milton Friedmanโs philosophy, few people would agree that a business firm
should fulfill only its economic and legal responsibilities and completely ignore ethical ones. The same is not true of
discretionary responsibilities, however. Because discretionary responsibilities are defined by Carroll as purely
voluntary, there is no pressure by anyone for a business firm to fulfill them. One can argue, nevertheless, that there
are three good reasons to undertake these kinds of responsibilities. The first reason is the morality rationaleโit may
be the right thing to do, even though the company may not benefit and may even be hurt in the short run. The second
reason is enlightened self-interest. If a firm undertakes a discretionary activity, it may gain short-run advantages in
the marketplace (e.g., a company offering free day care to its employees may attract more potential workers at lower
wages). It may also serve as a role model for government to legislate if and when that responsibility moves from
discretionary to ethical and finally to legal (and thus the firm is able to do things its way instead of the governmentโs
way). The third reason is also one of enlightened self-interest. If a company develops a reputation for voluntarily
doing socially useful activities even though it gains little economically in return, it may collect valuable public
relations credit in peopleโs minds. This may translate into better sales or a willingness on the part of some
government agency to overlook a questionable activity the company might unthinkingly engage in.
SUGGESTIONS FOR STRATEGIC PRACTICE EXERCISE
The end of chapter exercise asks the student to evaluate the position of an organization facing a particular dilemma
and to suggest a course of action to the manager. Students should read the exercise and make the decision in an
ethical manner for the manager. Ideally, students may analyze the problem in three ways: fiduciary duty, stakeholder
analysis, and the Kantian categorical imperative. If students view the managerโs fiduciary duty to the shareholders as
paramount, they will decide to make the gamble. If they see a duty to stakeholders other than shareholders (e.g.,
employees, customers, etc.), they will still choose to act as if the product closer to release is THE ONE. Students
will also reach a conclusion based on the Kantian categorical imperative explained in the chapter.
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