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Sample Questions Posted Below
Chapter 05
Ethics, Corporate Social Responsibility, and Sustainability
True / False Questions
1. | Ethical strategies are the accepted principles of right or wrong governing the conduct of businesspeople.
True False |
2. | What is considered normal business practice in one country may be considered unethical in other countries.
True False |
3. | The Sullivan principles mandated that GM could operate in South Africa as long as the company complied with the apartheid laws.
True False |
4. | Corporations can contribute to the global tragedy of the commons by not pumping pollutants into the atmosphere or dumping them in oceans or rivers.
True False |
5. | International businesses cannot gain economic advantages by making payments to corrupt government officials.
True False |
6. | The Foreign Corrupt Practices Act originally allowed “facilitating payments” to secure contracts that would not otherwise be secured.
True False |
7. | In a business setting, noblesse oblige is taken to mean benevolent behavior that is the responsibility of successful enterprises.
True False |
8. | Social responsibility refers to the idea that businesspeople should favor decisions that have both good economic and social consequences.
True False |
9. | The ethical obligations of a multinational corporation toward employment conditions, human rights, environmental pollution, and the use of power are always clear-cut.
True False |
10. | Ethical dilemmas are situations in which none of the available alternatives seems ethically acceptable.
True False |
11. | Societal business ethics are divorced from personal ethics.
True False |
12. | An individual with a strong sense of personal ethics is less likely to behave in an unethical manner in a business setting.
True False |
13. | A firm’s organizational culture refers to the values and norms that are shared among employees of an organization.
True False |
14. | The utilitarian approach to ethics is a straw men approach to business ethics that has some inherent value, but is unsatisfactory in important ways.
True False |
15. | Milton Friedman’s basic position is that the only social responsibility of business is to increase profits, so long as the company stays within the rules of law.
True False |
16. | The Friedman doctrine is the belief that ethics are nothing more than a reflection of culture and therefore, a firm should adopt the ethics of the culture in which it is operating.
True False |
17. | Cultural relativism suggests that even if slavery is culturally acceptable in a country, a foreign firm operating in that country should avoid using slave labor.
True False |
18. | The righteous moralist approach to ethics is typically associated with managers from developing and under-developed nations.
True False |
19. | Most moral philosophers see value in utilitarian and Kantian approaches to business ethics.
True False |
20. | Utilitarian philosophy takes into consideration the principle of justice.
True False |
21. | According to Rawls, inequalities are unjust even if the system that produces inequalities is to the advantage of everyone.
True False |
22. | Building an organization culture that places a high value on ethical behavior requires incentive and reward systems.
True False |
23. | To establish moral intent, managers need to stand in the shoes of a stakeholder and ask how a proposed decision might impact that stakeholder.
True False |
24. | To foster ethical behavior, many businesses draft a code of ethics, which is an informal statement of the ethical priorities the company follows.
True False |
25. | Ethics officers are hired by many businesses to make sure that all employees are trained to be ethically aware and that ethical considerations enter the business decision-making process at all levels of the organization.
True False |
Multiple Choice Questions
26. | The _____ occurs when a resource held in common by all, but owned by no one, is overused by individuals, resulting in its degradation.
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27. | The _____ outlawed the paying of bribes to foreign government officials to gain business.
|
28. | Facilitating payments are also known as _____.
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29. | _____ is a French term that refers to honorable and benevolent behavior considered the responsibility of people of high (noble) birth.
|
30. | Ethical dilemmas exist because many real-world decisions involve:
|
31. | Employees in a business often take their cue from _____.
|
32. | _____ approaches to business ethics are raised by business ethics scholars primarily to demonstrate that they offer inappropriate ethical decision making in a multinational enterprise.
|
33. | _____ arguments suggest that improving working conditions beyond the level required by the law and necessary to maximize employee productivity will reduce profits and are therefore not appropriate.
|
34. | According to the _____ point-of-view, a firm should adopt the ethics of the culture in which it is operating.
|
35. | According to the _____, even if a manager of a multinational sees that firms from other nations are not following ethical norms in a host nation, that manager should maintain the standards of the company’s home country.
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36. | An American firm that sets up production units in China is accused of releasing untreated chemical waste into water bodies. The manager of the firm defends the firm stating that, factories in China set up by French and British firms also release untreated chemical waste into water bodies. What approach to business ethics is the manager using?
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37. | The _____ approaches to ethics hold that the moral worth of actions or practices is determined by their consequences.
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38. | _____ recognize that human beings have fundamental rights and privileges that transcend national boundaries and cultures.
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39. | Talking with _____ is a good way to discern a potential employee’s ethical predisposition.
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40. | A firm’s _____ include customers, suppliers, and lenders.
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41. | _____ enables managers to walk away from a decision that is profitable but unethical.
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42. | Companies can strengthen the _____ of employees by committing themselves to not retaliate against employees who complain about unethical actions.
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43. | It is in the best interest of prospective employees to find out all they can about the:
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44. | Which of the following was designed to allow GM to operate ethically in South Africa as long as the company did not obey the apartheid laws in its own South African operations?
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45. | Identify the INCORRECT statement about environmental regulations.
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46. | The _____ occurs when a resource is shared by all, but owned by no one, is overused by individuals, resulting in its degradation.
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47. | An international U.S.-based company sets up a production unit in a developing country with poor environmental regulations. This contributes to the:
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48. | Which of the following observations about the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act is true?
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49. | Facilitating payments are:
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50. | The Convention on Combating Bribery of Foreign Public Officials in International Business Transactions excludes:
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51. | The idea that businesspeople should consider the social consequences of economic actions when making business decisions and that there should be a presumption in favor of decisions that have both good economic and social consequences is known as:
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52. | Which of the following, in a business setting, is taken to mean benevolent behavior that is the responsibility of successful enterprises?
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53. | BP, one of the world’s largest oil companies, has made it part of the company policy to undertake “social investments” in the countries where it does business. There was no economic reason for BP to make this social investment, but the company believes it is morally obligated to give something back to the societies that have made their success possible. BP’s actions are an example of:
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54. | A situation in which none of the available alternatives seems morally acceptable is called:
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55. | Expatriate managers may experience more than the usual degree of pressure to violate their personal ethics because of which of the following?
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56. | Which of the following refers to the values and norms that the employees of an organization share?
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57. | According to _____, the social responsibility of business is to increase profits, so long as the company stays within the rules of law.
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58. | According to the Friedman doctrine:
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59. | Cultural relativism suggests that:
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60. | Child labor is permitted and widely employed in Country X. A multinational company entering Country X decides to employ minors in its subsidiary, even though it is against the multinational’s home-country ethics. Which of the following approaches to business ethics would justify the actions of the multinational company?
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61. | A multinational company is accused of paying bribes to the government of a host country to obtain permission to build a production factory. The public relations manager of the company defends the company’s actions as being ethically sound; he states that in the host country, paying bribes to government officials is the accepted norm and is in keeping with the social practices in the host country. The public relations manager is using which of the following philosophical doctrines to defend the actions of the company?
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62. | In its extreme viewpoint, _____ suggests that if a culture supports slavery, it is all right to use slave labor in the country.
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63. | The righteous moralist suggests that:
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64. | According to the naive immoralist,
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65. | An American manager in Colombia routinely pays off the local drug lord to guarantee that his plant will not be bombed and that none of his employees will be kidnapped. The manager argues that such payments are ethically defensible because everyone is doing it. The manager’s argument exemplifies which of the following ethical approaches?
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66. | The utilitarian approach to business ethics suggests that:
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67. | According to the _____ approach, the best decisions are those that produce the greatest good for the greatest number of people.
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68. | The products of Carmen Stores, an international sports apparel chain, are manufactured in sweat factories in China. According to the company president, using sweatshop labor offers a means of livelihood to children and young adults, as well as supplies good quality apparel to customers at a lower cost. She asserts that the actions of the company are justified because it results in the benefit of the maximum number of people. The company president’s argument is based on which of the following ethical viewpoints?
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69. | The Kantian approach to ethics suggests that:
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70. | Identify the correct statement about the rights theories.
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71. | Which of the following persons believed that people should be treated as ends and never purely as means to the ends of others?
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72. | The United Nations Universal Declaration of Human Rights, related to employment, upholds which of the following?
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73. | Article 1 of the United Nations Universal Declaration of Human Rights states: All human beings are born free and equal in dignity and rights. This best echoes:
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74. | Which of the following statements is true about the United Nations Universal Declaration of Human Rights?
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75. | Justice theories of business ethics focus on:
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76. | According to John Rawls:
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77. | Rawls’ philosophy that inequalities are justified if they benefit the position of the least-advantaged person is known as the:
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78. | According to John Rawls’s difference principle,
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79. | External stakeholders:
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80. | Which of the following is an example of an external stakeholder?
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81. | _____ means standing in the shoes of a stakeholder and asking how a proposed decision might impact that stakeholder.
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82. | Establishing _____ involves a business to resolve to place moral concerns ahead of other concerns in cases where either the fundamental rights of stakeholders or key moral principles have been violated.
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83. | Which of the following enables managers to walk away from a decision that is profitable, but unethical?
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84. | What is the term for a company’s formal statement of the ethical priorities it expects all of its employees to follow?
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85. | Business ethics that either deny the value of business ethics or apply the concept in a very unsatisfactory way are termed _____.
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86. | Which of the following ethical theories explicitly rejects the idea that businesses should undertake social expenditures beyond those mandated by the law and required for the efficient running of a business?
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87. | A(n) _____ asserts that if a manager of a multinational sees that firms from other nations are not following ethical norms in a host nation, that manager should not either.
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88. | Any person or institution that is capable of moral action such as a government or corporation is a(n) _____.
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89. | Under the veil of ignorance, everyone is imagined to be ignorant of:
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90. | _____ are the accepted principles of right or wrong governing the conduct of businesspeople.
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91. | The veil of ignorance was developed by _____ as part of his approach to justice theories.
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92. | Often, the code of ethics draws heavily upon documents such as the _____, which itself is grounded in Kantian and rights-based theories of moral philosophy.
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93. | Which of the following is a reason why managers behave in a manner that is unethical?
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94. | In the international business setting, one of the most common ethical issues involves _____.
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95. | The _____ obliges member states to make the bribery of foreign public officials a criminal offense and excludes facilitating payments made to expedite routine government action from the convention.
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Essay Questions
96. | Discuss how companies such as Exxon, Kodak, and IBM helped improve human rights in South Africa.
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97. | Should a multinational feel free to pollute in a developing nation?
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98. | In your opinion, are bribes ever acceptable? Why or why not?
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99. | Discuss the notion of social responsibility. What does it mean for corporations?
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100. | What are ethical dilemmas? Why do they exist?
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101. | Why are expatriate managers at a greater risk of violating their personal code of ethics?
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102. | Explain the Friedman doctrine. Who developed the philosophy? How well does this approach hold up ethically?
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103. | Discuss the cultural relativism approach to business ethics. What is the connection between this approach and the phrase “When in Rome do as the Romans”? How well does this approach hold up ethically?
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104. | Discuss the naive immoralist’s approach to business ethics. What are the criticisms of this approach?
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105. | Discuss the utilitarian approach to business ethics. When was this approach developed? What are its drawbacks?
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106. | What are the ways in which international business and its managers can ensure that ethical issues are considered in business decisions?
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107. | Describe the five-step process that businesses can use to think through ethical problems.
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108. | Why do organizations appoint an ethics officer?
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109. | How can companies strengthen the moral courage of employees?
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110. | Explain the concept of moral imagination as it relates to a company’s stakeholders.
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Chapter 05 Ethics, Corporate Social Responsibility, and Sustainability Answer Key
True / False Questions
1. | Ethical strategies are the accepted principles of right or wrong governing the conduct of businesspeople.
FALSE An ethical strategy is a strategy, or course of action, that does not violate the accepted principles of right or wrong governing the conduct of businesspeople. |
AACSB: Ethics Accessibility: Keyboard Navigation Blooms: Understand Difficulty: 1 Easy Gradable: automatic Learning Objective: 05-01 Understand the ethical issues faced by international businesses. Topic: Ethical Issues in International Business |
2. | What is considered normal business practice in one country may be considered unethical in other countries.
TRUE Many of the ethical issues in international business are rooted in the fact that political systems, law, economic development, and culture vary significantly from nation to nation. What is considered normal practice in one nation may be considered unethical in another. |
AACSB: Ethics Accessibility: Keyboard Navigation Blooms: Remember Difficulty: 1 Easy Gradable: automatic Learning Objective: 05-01 Understand the ethical issues faced by international businesses. Topic: Ethical Issues in International Business |
3. | The Sullivan principles mandated that GM could operate in South Africa as long as the company complied with the apartheid laws.
FALSE GM adopted the Sullivan principles. Sullivan argued that it was ethically justified for GM to operate in South Africa so long as two conditions were fulfilled. First, the company should not obey the apartheid laws in its own South African operations. Second, the company should do everything within its power to promote the abolition of apartheid laws. |
AACSB: Ethics Accessibility: Keyboard Navigation Blooms: Understand Difficulty: 1 Easy Gradable: automatic Learning Objective: 05-01 Understand the ethical issues faced by international businesses. Topic: Ethical Issues in International Business |
4. | Corporations can contribute to the global tragedy of the commons by not pumping pollutants into the atmosphere or dumping them in oceans or rivers.
FALSE In the modern world, corporations can contribute to the global tragedy of the commons by moving production to locations where they are free to pump pollutants into the atmosphere or dump them in oceans or rivers, thereby harming these valuable global commons. |
AACSB: Ethics Accessibility: Keyboard Navigation Blooms: Understand Difficulty: 2 Medium Gradable: automatic Learning Objective: 05-01 Understand the ethical issues faced by international businesses. Topic: Ethical Issues in International Business |
5. | International businesses cannot gain economic advantages by making payments to corrupt government officials.
FALSE There always have been and always will be corrupt government officials. International businesses can and have gained economic advantages by making payments to those officials. |
AACSB: Ethics Accessibility: Keyboard Navigation Blooms: Understand Difficulty: 2 Medium Gradable: automatic Learning Objective: 05-01 Understand the ethical issues faced by international businesses. Topic: Ethical Issues in International Business |
6. | The Foreign Corrupt Practices Act originally allowed “facilitating payments” to secure contracts that would not otherwise be secured.
FALSE The Foreign Corrupt Practices Act was subsequently amended to allow for “facilitating payments.” Sometimes known as speed money or grease payments, facilitating payments are not payments to secure contracts that would not otherwise be secured and nor are they payments to obtain exclusive preferential treatment. |
AACSB: Ethics Accessibility: Keyboard Navigation Blooms: Understand Difficulty: 2 Medium Gradable: automatic Learning Objective: 05-01 Understand the ethical issues faced by international businesses. Topic: Key Regulations Governing Ethics and Social Responsibility |
7. | In a business setting, noblesse oblige is taken to mean benevolent behavior that is the responsibility of successful enterprises.
TRUE Noblesse oblige is a French term that refers to honorable and benevolent behavior considered the responsibility of people of high (noble) birth. In a business setting, it is taken to mean benevolent behavior that is the responsibility of successful enterprises. |
AACSB: Ethics Accessibility: Keyboard Navigation Blooms: Remember Difficulty: 1 Easy Gradable: automatic Learning Objective: 05-01 Understand the ethical issues faced by international businesses. Topic: Ethical Issues in International Business |
8. | Social responsibility refers to the idea that businesspeople should favor decisions that have both good economic and social consequences.
TRUE The concept of social responsibility refers to the idea that businesspeople should consider the social consequences of economic actions when making business decisions, and that there should be a presumption in favor of decisions that have both good economic and social consequences. |
AACSB: Ethics Accessibility: Keyboard Navigation Blooms: Remember Difficulty: 1 Easy Gradable: automatic Learning Objective: 05-01 Understand the ethical issues faced by international businesses. Topic: Ethical Issues in International Business |
9. | The ethical obligations of a multinational corporation toward employment conditions, human rights, environmental pollution, and the use of power are always clear-cut.
FALSE The ethical obligations of a multinational corporation toward employment conditions, human rights, corruption, environmental pollution, and the use of power are not always clear-cut. |
AACSB: Ethics Accessibility: Keyboard Navigation Blooms: Remember Difficulty: 1 Easy Gradable: automatic Learning Objective: 05-02 Recognize an ethical dilemma. Topic: Ethical Decision Making |
10. | Ethical dilemmas are situations in which none of the available alternatives seems ethically acceptable.
TRUE Ethical dilemmas are situations in which none of the available alternatives seems ethically acceptable. |
AACSB: Ethics Accessibility: Keyboard Navigation Blooms: Remember Difficulty: 1 Easy Gradable: automatic Learning Objective: 05-02 Recognize an ethical dilemma. Topic: Ethical Decision Making |
11. | Societal business ethics are divorced from personal ethics.
FALSE Societal business ethics are not divorced from personal ethics, which are the generally accepted principles of right and wrong governing the conduct of individuals. |
AACSB: Ethics Accessibility: Keyboard Navigation Blooms: Remember Difficulty: 1 Easy Gradable: automatic Learning Objective: 05-03 Identify the causes of unethical behavior by managers. Topic: Causes of Unethical Behavior |
12. | An individual with a strong sense of personal ethics is less likely to behave in an unethical manner in a business setting.
TRUE Our personal ethical code exerts a profound influence on the way we behave as businesspeople. An individual with a strong sense of personal ethics is less likely to behave in an unethical manner in a business setting. |
AACSB: Ethics Accessibility: Keyboard Navigation Blooms: Remember Difficulty: 1 Easy Gradable: automatic Learning Objective: 05-03 Identify the causes of unethical behavior by managers. Topic: Causes of Unethical Behavior |
13. | A firm’s organizational culture refers to the values and norms that are shared among employees of an organization.
TRUE The term organization culture refers to the values and norms that are shared among employees of an organization. |
AACSB: Ethics Accessibility: Keyboard Navigation Blooms: Remember Difficulty: 1 Easy Gradable: automatic Learning Objective: 05-03 Identify the causes of unethical behavior by managers. Topic: Causes of Unethical Behavior |
14. | The utilitarian approach to ethics is a straw men approach to business ethics that has some inherent value, but is unsatisfactory in important ways.
FALSE Straw men approaches to business ethics can be characterized as the Friedman doctrine, cultural relativism, the righteous moralist, and the naive immoralist. |
AACSB: Ethics Accessibility: Keyboard Navigation Blooms: Understand Difficulty: 2 Medium Gradable: automatic Learning Objective: 05-04 Describe the different philosophical approaches to ethics. Topic: Philosophical Approaches to Ethics |
15. | Milton Friedman’s basic position is that the only social responsibility of business is to increase profits, so long as the company stays within the rules of law.
TRUE The Nobel Prize-winning economist Milton Friedman wrote an article in 1970 that has since become a classic straw man that business ethics scholars outline only to then tear down. Friedman’s basic position is that the only social responsibility of business is to increase profits, so long as the company stays within the rules of law. |
AACSB: Ethics Accessibility: Keyboard Navigation Blooms: Remember Difficulty: 1 Easy Gradable: automatic Learning Objective: 05-04 Describe the different philosophical approaches to ethics. Topic: Philosophical Approaches to Ethics |
16. | The Friedman doctrine is the belief that ethics are nothing more than a reflection of culture and therefore, a firm should adopt the ethics of the culture in which it is operating.
FALSE Friedman’s basic position is that the only social responsibility of business is to increase profits, so long as the company stays within the rules of law. He explicitly rejects the idea that businesses should undertake social expenditures beyond those mandated by the law and required for the efficient running of a business. |
AACSB: Ethics Accessibility: Keyboard Navigation Blooms: Understand Difficulty: 1 Easy Gradable: automatic Learning Objective: 05-04 Describe the different philosophical approaches to ethics. Topic: Philosophical Approaches to Ethics |
17. | Cultural relativism suggests that even if slavery is culturally acceptable in a country, a foreign firm operating in that country should avoid using slave labor.
FALSE At its extreme, cultural relativism suggests that if a culture supports slavery, it is OK to use slave labor in a country. |
AACSB: Ethics Accessibility: Keyboard Navigation Blooms: Analyze Difficulty: 2 Medium Gradable: automatic Learning Objective: 05-04 Describe the different philosophical approaches to ethics. Topic: Philosophical Approaches to Ethics |
18. | The righteous moralist approach to ethics is typically associated with managers from developing and under-developed nations.
FALSE A righteous moralist claims that a multinational’s home-country standards of ethics are the appropriate ones for companies to follow in foreign countries. This approach is typically associated with managers from developed nations. |
AACSB: Ethics Accessibility: Keyboard Navigation Blooms: Understand Difficulty: 1 Easy Gradable: automatic Learning Objective: 05-04 Describe the different philosophical approaches to ethics. Topic: Philosophical Approaches to Ethics |
19. | Most moral philosophers see value in utilitarian and Kantian approaches to business ethics.
TRUE In contrast to the straw men approaches to ethics, most moral philosophers see value in utilitarian and Kantian approaches to business ethics. |
AACSB: Ethics Accessibility: Keyboard Navigation Blooms: Remember Difficulty: 1 Easy Gradable: automatic Learning Objective: 05-04 Describe the different philosophical approaches to ethics. Topic: Philosophical Approaches to Ethics |
20. | Utilitarian philosophy takes into consideration the principle of justice.
FALSE The problem with utilitarianism is that the philosophy omits the consideration of justice. The action that produces the greatest good for the greatest number of people may result in the unjustified treatment of a minority. |
AACSB: Ethics Accessibility: Keyboard Navigation Blooms: Understand Difficulty: 2 Medium Gradable: automatic Learning Objective: 05-04 Describe the different philosophical approaches to ethics. Topic: Philosophical Approaches to Ethics |
21. | According to Rawls, inequalities are unjust even if the system that produces inequalities is to the advantage of everyone.
FALSE Rawls accepts that inequalities can be just if the system that produces inequalities is to the advantage of everyone. More precisely, he formulates what he calls the difference principle, which is that inequalities are justified if they benefit the position of the least-advantaged person. |
AACSB: Ethics Accessibility: Keyboard Navigation Blooms: Understand Difficulty: 1 Easy Gradable: automatic Learning Objective: 05-04 Describe the different philosophical approaches to ethics. Topic: Philosophical Approaches to Ethics |
22. | Building an organization culture that places a high value on ethical behavior requires incentive and reward systems.
TRUE Building an organization culture that places a high value on ethical behavior requires incentive and reward systems, including promotions that reward people who engage in ethical behavior and sanction those who do not. |
AACSB: Ethics Accessibility: Keyboard Navigation Blooms: Understand Difficulty: 2 Medium Gradable: automatic Learning Objective: 05-05 Explain how managers can incorporate ethical considerations into their decision making. Topic: Ethical Issues in International Business |
23. | To establish moral intent, managers need to stand in the shoes of a stakeholder and ask how a proposed decision might impact that stakeholder.
FALSE Managers need to establish moral intent, to be able to think through ethical problems. This means the business must resolve to place moral concerns ahead of other concerns in cases where either the fundamental rights of stakeholders or key moral principles have been violated. |
AACSB: Ethics Accessibility: Keyboard Navigation Blooms: Understand Difficulty: 1 Easy Gradable: automatic Learning Objective: 05-05 Explain how managers can incorporate ethical considerations into their decision making. Topic: Ethical Decision Making |
24. | To foster ethical behavior, many businesses draft a code of ethics, which is an informal statement of the ethical priorities the company follows.
FALSE To foster ethical behavior, businesses need to build an organization that values ethical behavior. To do this, many companies now draft a code of ethics, which is a formal statement of the ethical priorities a business adheres to. |
AACSB: Ethics Accessibility: Keyboard Navigation Blooms: Understand Difficulty: 1 Easy Gradable: automatic Learning Objective: 05-05 Explain how managers can incorporate ethical considerations into their decision making. Topic: Ethical Issues in International Business |
25. | Ethics officers are hired by many businesses to make sure that all employees are trained to be ethically aware and that ethical considerations enter the business decision-making process at all levels of the organization.
TRUE To make sure that a business behaves in an ethical manner, a number of firms now have ethics officers. These individuals are responsible for making sure that all employees are trained to be ethically aware, that ethical considerations enter the business decision-making process, and that the company’s code of ethics if followed. |
AACSB: Ethics Accessibility: Keyboard Navigation Blooms: Remember Difficulty: 1 Easy Gradable: automatic Learning Objective: 05-05 Explain how managers can incorporate ethical considerations into their decision making. Topic: Ethical Issues in International Business |
Multiple Choice Questions
26. | The _____ occurs when a resource held in common by all, but owned by no one, is overused by individuals, resulting in its degradation.
The tragedy of the commons occurs when a resource held in common by all, but owned by no one, is overused by individuals, resulting in its degradation. The phenomenon was first named by Garrett Hardin when describing a particular problem in sixteenth-century England. |
AACSB: Ethics Accessibility: Keyboard Navigation Blooms: Remember Difficulty: 1 Easy Gradable: automatic Learning Objective: 05-01 Understand the ethical issues faced by international businesses. Topic: Ethical Issues in International Business |
27. | The _____ outlawed the paying of bribes to foreign government officials to gain business.
The Lockheed case was the impetus for the 1977 passage of the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act in the United States. The act outlawed the paying of bribes to foreign government officials to gain business. |
AACSB: Ethics Accessibility: Keyboard Navigation Blooms: Remember Difficulty: 1 Easy Gradable: automatic Learning Objective: 05-01 Understand the ethical issues faced by international businesses. Topic: Key Regulations Governing Ethics and Social Responsibility |
28. | Facilitating payments are also known as _____.
Sometimes known as speed money or grease payments, facilitating payments are not payments to secure contracts that would not otherwise be secured and nor are they payments to obtain exclusive preferential treatment. |
AACSB: Ethics Accessibility: Keyboard Navigation Blooms: Remember Difficulty: 1 Easy Gradable: automatic Learning Objective: 05-01 Understand the ethical issues faced by international businesses. Topic: Ethical Issues in International Business |
29. | _____ is a French term that refers to honorable and benevolent behavior considered the responsibility of people of high (noble) birth.
Noblesse oblige is a French term that refers to honorable and benevolent behavior considered the responsibility of people of high (noble) birth. |
AACSB: Ethics Accessibility: Keyboard Navigation Blooms: Remember Difficulty: 1 Easy Gradable: automatic Learning Objective: 05-01 Understand the ethical issues faced by international businesses. Topic: Ethical Issues in International Business |
30. | Ethical dilemmas exist because many real-world decisions involve:
Ethical dilemmas exist because many real-world decisions are complex, difficult to frame, and involve first-, second-, and third-order consequences that are hard to quantify. Doing the right thing, or even knowing what the right thing might be, is often far from easy. |
AACSB: Ethics Accessibility: Keyboard Navigation Blooms: Apply Difficulty: 2 Medium Gradable: automatic Learning Objective: 05-02 Recognize an ethical dilemma. Topic: Ethical Decision Making |
31. | Employees in a business often take their cue from _____.
Leaders help to establish the culture of an organization, and they set the example that others follow. Other employees in a business often take their cue from business leaders, and if those leaders do not behave in an ethical manner, they might not either. |
AACSB: Ethics Accessibility: Keyboard Navigation Blooms: Remember Difficulty: 1 Easy Gradable: automatic Learning Objective: 05-03 Identify the causes of unethical behavior by managers. Topic: Causes of Unethical Behavior |
32. | _____ approaches to business ethics are raised by business ethics scholars primarily to demonstrate that they offer inappropriate ethical decision making in a multinational enterprise.
Straw men approaches to business ethics are raised by business ethics scholars primarily to demonstrate that they offer inappropriate guidelines for ethical decision making in a multinational enterprise. |
AACSB: Ethics Accessibility: Keyboard Navigation Blooms: Apply Difficulty: 2 Medium Gradable: automatic Learning Objective: 05-04 Describe the different philosophical approaches to ethics. Topic: Philosophical Approaches to Ethics |
33. | _____ arguments suggest that improving working conditions beyond the level required by the law and necessary to maximize employee productivity will reduce profits and are therefore not appropriate.
Friedman explicitly rejects the idea that businesses should undertake social expenditures beyond those mandated by the law and required for the efficient running of a business. |
AACSB: Ethics Accessibility: Keyboard Navigation Blooms: Understand Difficulty: 2 Medium Gradable: automatic Learning Objective: 05-04 Describe the different philosophical approaches to ethics. Topic: Philosophical Approaches to Ethics |
34. | According to the _____ point-of-view, a firm should adopt the ethics of the culture in which it is operating.
Cultural relativism is the belief that ethics are nothing more than the reflection of a culture—all ethics are culturally determined—and that accordingly, a firm should adopt the ethics of the culture in which it is operating. |
AACSB: Ethics Accessibility: Keyboard Navigation Blooms: Apply Difficulty: 2 Medium Gradable: automatic Learning Objective: 05-04 Describe the different philosophical approaches to ethics. Topic: Philosophical Approaches to Ethics |
35. | According to the _____, even if a manager of a multinational sees that firms from other nations are not following ethical norms in a host nation, that manager should maintain the standards of the company’s home country.
A righteous moralist claims that a multinational’s home-country standards of ethics are the appropriate ones for companies to follow in foreign countries. |
AACSB: Ethics Accessibility: Keyboard Navigation Blooms: Apply Difficulty: 2 Medium Gradable: automatic Learning Objective: 05-04 Describe the different philosophical approaches to ethics. Topic: Philosophical Approaches to Ethics |
36. | An American firm that sets up production units in China is accused of releasing untreated chemical waste into water bodies. The manager of the firm defends the firm stating that, factories in China set up by French and British firms also release untreated chemical waste into water bodies. What approach to business ethics is the manager using?
A naive immoralist asserts that if a manager of a multinational sees that firms from other nations are not following ethical norms in a host nation, that manager should not either. |
AACSB: Ethics AACSB: Reflective Thinking Accessibility: Keyboard Navigation Blooms: Apply Difficulty: 2 Medium Gradable: automatic Learning Objective: 05-04 Describe the different philosophical approaches to ethics. Topic: Philosophical Approaches to Ethics |
37. | The _____ approaches to ethics hold that the moral worth of actions or practices is determined by their consequences.
Utilitarian approaches to ethics hold that the moral worth of actions or practices is determined by their consequences. An action is judged desirable if it leads to the best possible balance of good consequences over bad consequences. |
AACSB: Ethics Accessibility: Keyboard Navigation Blooms: Remember Difficulty: 1 Easy Gradable: automatic Learning Objective: 05-04 Describe the different philosophical approaches to ethics. Topic: Philosophical Approaches to Ethics |
38. | _____ recognize that human beings have fundamental rights and privileges that transcend national boundaries and cultures.
Developed in the twentieth century, rights theories recognize that human beings have fundamental rights and privileges that transcend national boundaries and cultures. Rights establish a minimum level of morally acceptable behavior. |
AACSB: Ethics Accessibility: Keyboard Navigation Blooms: Understand Difficulty: 1 Easy Gradable: automatic Learning Objective: 05-04 Describe the different philosophical approaches to ethics. Topic: Philosophical Approaches to Ethics |
39. | Talking with _____ is a good way to discern a potential employee’s ethical predisposition.
Businesses can give potential employees psychological tests to try to discern their ethical predisposition, and they can check with prior employees regarding someone’s reputation (e.g., by asking for letters of reference and talking to people who have worked with the prospective employee). The latter is common and does influence the hiring process. |
AACSB: Ethics Accessibility: Keyboard Navigation Blooms: Understand Difficulty: 1 Easy Gradable: automatic Learning Objective: 05-05 Explain how managers can incorporate ethical considerations into their decision making. Topic: Ethical Decision Making |
40. | A firm’s _____ include customers, suppliers, and lenders.
Internal stakeholders are individuals or groups who work for or own the business. External stakeholders are all other individuals and groups that have some claim on the firm. Typically, this group comprises customers, suppliers, lenders, governments, unions, local communities, and the general public. |
AACSB: Ethics Accessibility: Keyboard Navigation Blooms: Understand Difficulty: 2 Medium Gradable: automatic Learning Objective: 05-05 Explain how managers can incorporate ethical considerations into their decision making. Topic: Ethical Decision Making |
41. | _____ enables managers to walk away from a decision that is profitable but unethical.
It is important to recognize that employees in an international business may need significant moral courage. Moral courage enables managers to walk away from a decision that is profitable but unethical. |
AACSB: Ethics Accessibility: Keyboard Navigation Blooms: Remember Difficulty: 1 Easy Gradable: automatic Learning Objective: 05-05 Explain how managers can incorporate ethical considerations into their decision making. Topic: Ethical Decision Making |
42. | Companies can strengthen the _____ of employees by committing themselves to not retaliate against employees who complain about unethical actions.
Companies can strengthen the moral courage of employees by committing themselves to not retaliate against employees who exercise moral courage, say no to superiors, or otherwise complain about unethical actions. |
AACSB: Ethics Accessibility: Keyboard Navigation Blooms: Remember Difficulty: 1 Easy Gradable: automatic Learning Objective: 05-05 Explain how managers can incorporate ethical considerations into their decision making. Topic: Ethical Decision Making |
43. | It is in the best interest of prospective employees to find out all they can about the:
Not only should businesses strive to identify and hire people with a strong sense of personal ethics, but it also is in the best interest of prospective employees to find out as much as they can about the ethical climate in an organization. |
AACSB: Ethics Accessibility: Keyboard Navigation Blooms: Understand Difficulty: 1 Easy Gradable: automatic Learning Objective: 05-05 Explain how managers can incorporate ethical considerations into their decision making. Topic: Ethics and Social Responsibility |
44. | Which of the following was designed to allow GM to operate ethically in South Africa as long as the company did not obey the apartheid laws in its own South African operations?
GM adopted what came to be called the Sullivan principles, named after Leon Sullivan, a black Baptist minister and a member of GM’s board of directors. Sullivan argued that it was ethically justified for GM to operate in South Africa so long as certain conditions were fulfilled. |
AACSB: Ethics Accessibility: Keyboard Navigation Blooms: Apply Difficulty: 2 Medium Gradable: automatic Learning Objective: 05-01 Understand the ethical issues faced by international businesses. Topic: Ethical Issues in International Business |
45. | Identify the INCORRECT statement about environmental regulations.
Many developed nations have substantial regulations governing the emission of pollutants, the dumping of toxic chemicals, the use of toxic materials in the workplace, and so on. Those regulations are often lacking in developing nations, and according to critics, the result can be higher levels of pollution from the operations of multinationals than would be allowed at home. |
AACSB: Ethics Accessibility: Keyboard Navigation Blooms: Analyze Difficulty: 2 Medium Gradable: automatic Learning Objective: 05-01 Understand the ethical issues faced by international businesses. Topic: Ethical Issues in International Business |
46. | The _____ occurs when a resource is shared by all, but owned by no one, is overused by individuals, resulting in its degradation.
The tragedy of the commons occurs when a resource held in common by all, but owned by no one, is overused by individuals, resulting in its degradation. |
AACSB: Ethics Accessibility: Keyboard Navigation Blooms: Remember Difficulty: 1 Easy Gradable: automatic Learning Objective: 05-01 Understand the ethical issues faced by international businesses. Topic: Ethical Issues in International Business |
47. | An international U.S.-based company sets up a production unit in a developing country with poor environmental regulations. This contributes to the:
In the modern world, corporations can contribute to the global tragedy of the commons by moving production to locations where they are free to pump pollutants into the atmosphere or dump them in oceans or rivers, thereby harming these valuable global commons. |
AACSB: Ethics Accessibility: Keyboard Navigation Blooms: Apply Difficulty: 2 Medium Gradable: automatic Learning Objective: 05-01 Understand the ethical issues faced by international businesses. Topic: Ethical Issues in International Business |
48. | Which of the following observations about the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act is true?
The Lockheed case was the impetus for the 1977 passage of the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act in the United States. The act outlawed the paying of bribes to foreign government officials to gain business. |
AACSB: Ethics Accessibility: Keyboard Navigation Blooms: Apply Difficulty: 2 Medium Gradable: automatic Learning Objective: 05-01 Understand the ethical issues faced by international businesses. Topic: Key Regulations Governing Ethics and Social Responsibility |
49. | Facilitating payments are:
Sometimes known as speed money or grease payments, facilitating payments are payments to ensure receiving the standard treatment that a business ought to receive from a foreign government, but might not due to the obstruction of a foreign official. |
AACSB: Ethics Accessibility: Keyboard Navigation Blooms: Understand Difficulty: 1 Easy Gradable: automatic Learning Objective: 05-01 Understand the ethical issues faced by international businesses. Topic: Key Regulations Governing Ethics and Social Responsibility |
50. | The Convention on Combating Bribery of Foreign Public Officials in International Business Transactions excludes:
The Convention on Combating Bribery of Foreign Public Officials in International Business Transactions excludes facilitating payments made to expedite routine government action from the convention. |
AACSB: Ethics Accessibility: Keyboard Navigation Blooms: Understand Difficulty: 1 Easy Gradable: automatic Learning Objective: 05-01 Understand the ethical issues faced by international businesses. Topic: Key Regulations Governing Ethics and Social Responsibility |
51. | The idea that businesspeople should consider the social consequences of economic actions when making business decisions and that there should be a presumption in favor of decisions that have both good economic and social consequences is known as:
The concept of social responsibility refers to the idea that businesspeople should consider the social consequences of economic actions when making business decisions, and that there should be a presumption in favor of decisions that have both good economic and social consequences. |
AACSB: Ethics Accessibility: Keyboard Navigation Blooms: Remember Difficulty: 1 Easy Gradable: automatic Learning Objective: 05-01 Understand the ethical issues faced by international businesses. Topic: Ethics and Social Responsibility |
52. | Which of the following, in a business setting, is taken to mean benevolent behavior that is the responsibility of successful enterprises?
Noblesse oblige is a French term that refers to honorable and benevolent behavior considered the responsibility of people of high (noble) birth. In a business setting, it is taken to mean benevolent behavior that is the responsibility of successful enterprises. |
AACSB: Ethics Accessibility: Keyboard Navigation Blooms: Remember Difficulty: 1 Easy Gradable: automatic Learning Objective: 05-01 Understand the ethical issues faced by international businesses. Topic: Ethics and Social Responsibility |
53. | BP, one of the world’s largest oil companies, has made it part of the company policy to undertake “social investments” in the countries where it does business. There was no economic reason for BP to make this social investment, but the company believes it is morally obligated to give something back to the societies that have made their success possible. BP’s actions are an example of:
Noblesse oblige is a French term that refers to honorable and benevolent behavior considered the responsibility of people of high (noble) birth. In a business setting, it is taken to mean benevolent behavior that is the responsibility of successful enterprises. |
AACSB: Ethics Accessibility: Keyboard Navigation Blooms: Understand Difficulty: 2 Medium Gradable: automatic Learning Objective: 05-01 Understand the ethical issues faced by international businesses. Topic: Ethics and Social Responsibility |
54. | A situation in which none of the available alternatives seems morally acceptable is called:
Ethical dilemmas are situations in which none of the available alternatives seems ethically acceptable. |
AACSB: Ethics Accessibility: Keyboard Navigation Blooms: Remember Difficulty: 1 Easy Gradable: automatic Learning Objective: 05-02 Recognize an ethical dilemma. Topic: Ethical Decision Making |
55. | Expatriate managers may experience more than the usual degree of pressure to violate their personal ethics because of which of the following?
Home-country managers working abroad in multinational firms (expatriate managers) may experience more than the usual degree of pressure to violate their personal ethics. They are away from their ordinary social context and supporting culture, and they are psychologically and geographically distant from the parent company. |
AACSB: Ethics Accessibility: Keyboard Navigation Blooms: Apply Difficulty: 2 Medium Gradable: automatic Learning Objective: 05-03 Identify the causes of unethical behavior by managers. Topic: Causes of Unethical Behavior |
56. | Which of the following refers to the values and norms that the employees of an organization share?
The term organization culture refers to the values and norms that are shared among employees of an organization. |
AACSB: Ethics Accessibility: Keyboard Navigation Blooms: Remember Difficulty: 1 Easy Gradable: automatic Learning Objective: 05-03 Identify the causes of unethical behavior by managers. Topic: Causes of Unethical Behavior |
57. | According to _____, the social responsibility of business is to increase profits, so long as the company stays within the rules of law.
Friedman’s basic position is that the only social responsibility of business is to increase profits, so long as the company stays within the rules of law. He explicitly rejects the idea that businesses should undertake social expenditures beyond those mandated by the law and required for the efficient running of a business. |
AACSB: Ethics Accessibility: Keyboard Navigation Blooms: Remember Difficulty: 1 Easy Gradable: automatic Learning Objective: 05-04 Describe the different philosophical approaches to ethics. Topic: Philosophical Approaches to Ethics |
58. | According to the Friedman doctrine:
Friedman explicitly rejects the idea that businesses should undertake social expenditures beyond those mandated by the law and required for the efficient running of a business. |
AACSB: Ethics Accessibility: Keyboard Navigation Blooms: Understand Difficulty: 2 Medium Gradable: automatic Learning Objective: 05-04 Describe the different philosophical approaches to ethics. Topic: Philosophical Approaches to Ethics |
59. | Cultural relativism suggests that:
Cultural relativism is the belief that ethics are nothing more than the reflection of a culture—all ethics are culturally determined—and that accordingly, a firm should adopt the ethics of the culture in which it is operating. |
AACSB: Ethics Accessibility: Keyboard Navigation Blooms: Apply Difficulty: 2 Medium Gradable: automatic Learning Objective: 05-04 Describe the different philosophical approaches to ethics. Topic: Philosophical Approaches to Ethics |
60. | Child labor is permitted and widely employed in Country X. A multinational company entering Country X decides to employ minors in its subsidiary, even though it is against the multinational’s home-country ethics. Which of the following approaches to business ethics would justify the actions of the multinational company?
Cultural relativism is the belief that ethics are nothing more than the reflection of a culture—all ethics are culturally determined—and that accordingly, a firm should adopt the ethics of the culture in which it is operating. |
AACSB: Ethics AACSB: Reflective Thinking Accessibility: Keyboard Navigation Blooms: Apply Difficulty: 3 Hard Gradable: automatic Learning Objective: 05-04 Describe the different philosophical approaches to ethics. Topic: Philosophical Approaches to Ethics |
61. | A multinational company is accused of paying bribes to the government of a host country to obtain permission to build a production factory. The public relations manager of the company defends the company’s actions as being ethically sound; he states that in the host country, paying bribes to government officials is the accepted norm and is in keeping with the social practices in the host country. The public relations manager is using which of the following philosophical doctrines to defend the actions of the company?
Cultural relativism is the belief that ethics are nothing more than the reflection of a culture—all ethics are culturally determined—and that accordingly, a firm should adopt the ethics of the culture in which it is operating. |
AACSB: Ethics AACSB: Reflective Thinking Accessibility: Keyboard Navigation Blooms: Apply Difficulty: 3 Hard Gradable: automatic Learning Objective: 05-04 Describe the different philosophical approaches to ethics. Topic: Philosophical Approaches to Ethics |
62. | In its extreme viewpoint, _____ suggests that if a culture supports slavery, it is all right to use slave labor in the country.
Cultural relativism does not stand up to a closer look. At its extreme, cultural relativism suggests that if a culture supports slavery, it is OK to use slave labor in a country. |
AACSB: Ethics Accessibility: Keyboard Navigation Blooms: Understand Difficulty: 2 Medium Gradable: automatic Learning Objective: 05-04 Describe the different philosophical approaches to ethics. Topic: Philosophical Approaches to Ethics |
63. | The righteous moralist suggests that:
A righteous moralist claims that a multinational’s home-country standards of ethics are the appropriate ones for companies to follow in foreign countries. This approach is typically associated with managers from developed nations. |
AACSB: Ethics Accessibility: Keyboard Navigation Blooms: Remember Difficulty: 1 Easy Gradable: automatic Learning Objective: 05-04 Describe the different philosophical approaches to ethics. Topic: Philosophical Approaches to Ethics |
64. | According to the naive immoralist,
A naive immoralist asserts that if a manager of a multinational sees that firms from other nations are not following ethical norms in a host nation, that manager should not either. |
AACSB: Ethics Accessibility: Keyboard Navigation Blooms: Understand Difficulty: 2 Medium Gradable: automatic Learning Objective: 05-04 Describe the different philosophical approaches to ethics. Topic: Philosophical Approaches to Ethics |
65. | An American manager in Colombia routinely pays off the local drug lord to guarantee that his plant will not be bombed and that none of his employees will be kidnapped. The manager argues that such payments are ethically defensible because everyone is doing it. The manager’s argument exemplifies which of the following ethical approaches?
A naive immoralist asserts that if a manager of a multinational sees that firms from other nations are not following ethical norms in a host nation, that manager should not either. The classic example to illustrate the approach is known as the drug lord problem. |
AACSB: Ethics Accessibility: Keyboard Navigation Blooms: Apply Difficulty: 2 Medium Gradable: automatic Learning Objective: 05-04 Describe the different philosophical approaches to ethics. Topic: Philosophical Approaches to Ethics |
66. | The utilitarian approach to business ethics suggests that:
Utilitarian approaches to ethics hold that the moral worth of actions or practices is determined by their consequences. An action is judged desirable if it leads to the best possible balance of good consequences over bad consequences. |
AACSB: Ethics Accessibility: Keyboard Navigation Blooms: Remember Difficulty: 1 Easy Gradable: automatic Learning Objective: 05-04 Describe the different philosophical approaches to ethics. Topic: Philosophical Approaches to Ethics |
67. | According to the _____ approach, the best decisions are those that produce the greatest good for the greatest number of people.
The best decisions, from a utilitarian perspective, are those that produce the greatest good for the greatest number of people. |
AACSB: Ethics Accessibility: Keyboard Navigation Blooms: Remember Difficulty: 1 Easy Gradable: automatic Learning Objective: 05-04 Describe the different philosophical approaches to ethics. Topic: Philosophical Approaches to Ethics |
68. | The products of Carmen Stores, an international sports apparel chain, are manufactured in sweat factories in China. According to the company president, using sweatshop labor offers a means of livelihood to children and young adults, as well as supplies good quality apparel to customers at a lower cost. She asserts that the actions of the company are justified because it results in the benefit of the maximum number of people. The company president’s argument is based on which of the following ethical viewpoints?
As a philosophy for business ethics, utilitarianism focuses attention on the need to weigh carefully all of the social benefits and costs of a business action and to pursue only those actions where the benefits outweigh the costs. The best decisions, from a utilitarian perspective, are those that produce the greatest good for the greatest number of people. |
AACSB: Ethics AACSB: Reflective Thinking Accessibility: Keyboard Navigation Blooms: Apply Difficulty: 3 Hard Gradable: automatic Learning Objective: 05-04 Describe the different philosophical approaches to ethics. Topic: Philosophical Approaches to Ethics |
69. | The Kantian approach to ethics suggests that:
Kantian ethics hold that people should be treated as ends and never purely as means to the ends of others. |
AACSB: Ethics Accessibility: Keyboard Navigation Blooms: Remember Difficulty: 1 Easy Gradable: automatic Learning Objective: 05-04 Describe the different philosophical approaches to ethics. Topic: Philosophical Approaches to Ethics |
70. | Identify the correct statement about the rights theories.
Developed in the twentieth century, rights theories recognize that human beings have fundamental rights and privileges that transcend national boundaries and cultures. |
AACSB: Ethics Accessibility: Keyboard Navigation Blooms: Understand Difficulty: 1 Easy Gradable: automatic Learning Objective: 05-04 Describe the different philosophical approaches to ethics. Topic: Philosophical Approaches to Ethics |
71. | Which of the following persons believed that people should be treated as ends and never purely as means to the ends of others?
Kantian ethics are based on the philosophy of Immanuel Kant (1724-1804). Kantian ethics hold that people should be treated as ends and never purely as means to the ends of others. People are not instruments, like a machine. |
AACSB: Ethics Accessibility: Keyboard Navigation Blooms: Understand Difficulty: 1 Easy Gradable: automatic Learning Objective: 05-04 Describe the different philosophical approaches to ethics. Topic: Philosophical Approaches to Ethics |
72. | The United Nations Universal Declaration of Human Rights, related to employment, upholds which of the following?
Article 23 of the United Nations Universal Declaration of Human Rights states: Everyone has the right to form and to join trade unions for the protection of his interests. |
AACSB: Ethics Accessibility: Keyboard Navigation Blooms: Analyze Difficulty: 2 Medium Gradable: automatic Learning Objective: 05-04 Describe the different philosophical approaches to ethics. Topic: Philosophical Approaches to Ethics |
73. | Article 1 of the United Nations Universal Declaration of Human Rights states: All human beings are born free and equal in dignity and rights. This best echoes:
Echoing Kantian ethics, Article 1 of the United Nations Universal Declaration of Human Rights states: All human beings are born free and equal in dignity and rights. They are endowed with reason and conscience and should act towards one another in a spirit of brotherhood. |
AACSB: Ethics Accessibility: Keyboard Navigation Blooms: Apply Difficulty: 2 Medium Gradable: automatic Learning Objective: 05-04 Describe the different philosophical approaches to ethics. Topic: Philosophical Approaches to Ethics |
74. | Which of the following statements is true about the United Nations Universal Declaration of Human Rights?
The notion that there are fundamental rights that transcend national borders and cultures was the underlying motivation for the United Nations Universal Declaration of Human Rights, which has been ratified by almost every country on the planet and lays down basic principles that should always be adhered to irrespective of the culture in which one is doing business. |
AACSB: Ethics Accessibility: Keyboard Navigation Blooms: Understand Difficulty: 2 Medium Gradable: automatic Learning Objective: 05-04 Describe the different philosophical approaches to ethics. Topic: Philosophical Approaches to Ethics |
75. | Justice theories of business ethics focus on:
A just distribution is one that is considered fair and equitable. Rawls argues that all economic goods and services should be distributed equally except when an unequal distribution would work to everyone’s advantage. |
AACSB: Ethics Accessibility: Keyboard Navigation Blooms: Remember Difficulty: 1 Easy Gradable: automatic Learning Objective: 05-04 Describe the different philosophical approaches to ethics. Topic: Philosophical Approaches to Ethics |
76. | According to John Rawls:
According to Rawls, valid principles of justice are those with which all persons would agree if they could freely and impartially consider the situation. One such principle is that each person be permitted the maximum amount of basic liberty compatible with a similar liberty for others. |
AACSB: Ethics Accessibility: Keyboard Navigation Blooms: Remember Difficulty: 1 Easy Gradable: automatic Learning Objective: 05-04 Describe the different philosophical approaches to ethics. Topic: Philosophical Approaches to Ethics |
77. | Rawls’ philosophy that inequalities are justified if they benefit the position of the least-advantaged person is known as the:
John Rawls formulated what he called the difference principle, which is that inequalities are justified if they benefit the position of the least-advantaged person. |
AACSB: Ethics Accessibility: Keyboard Navigation Blooms: Remember Difficulty: 1 Easy Gradable: automatic Learning Objective: 05-04 Describe the different philosophical approaches to ethics. Topic: Philosophical Approaches to Ethics |
78. | According to John Rawls’s difference principle,
John Rawls formulated what he called the difference principle, which is that inequalities are justified if they benefit the position of the least-advantaged person. |
AACSB: Ethics Accessibility: Keyboard Navigation Blooms: Understand Difficulty: 1 Easy Gradable: automatic Learning Objective: 05-04 Describe the different philosophical approaches to ethics. Topic: Philosophical Approaches to Ethics |
79. | External stakeholders:
External stakeholders are all other individuals and groups that have some claim on the firm. Typically, this group comprises customers, suppliers, lenders, governments, unions, local communities, and the general public. |
AACSB: Ethics Accessibility: Keyboard Navigation Blooms: Remember Difficulty: 1 Easy Gradable: automatic Learning Objective: 05-05 Explain how managers can incorporate ethical considerations into their decision making. Topic: Ethics and Social Responsibility |
80. | Which of the following is an example of an external stakeholder?
Internal stakeholders include all employees, the board of directors, and stockholders. External stakeholders are all other individuals and groups that have some claim on the firm. Typically, this group comprises customers, suppliers, lenders, governments, unions, local communities, and the general public. |
AACSB: Ethics Accessibility: Keyboard Navigation Blooms: Remember Difficulty: 1 Easy Gradable: automatic Learning Objective: 05-05 Explain how managers can incorporate ethical considerations into their decision making. Topic: Ethics and Social Responsibility |
81. | _____ means standing in the shoes of a stakeholder and asking how a proposed decision might impact that stakeholder.
Stakeholder analysis involves a certain amount of what has been called moral imagination. This means standing in the shoes of a stakeholder and asking how a proposed decision might impact that stakeholder. |
AACSB: Ethics Accessibility: Keyboard Navigation Blooms: Remember Difficulty: 1 Easy Gradable: automatic Learning Objective: 05-05 Explain how managers can incorporate ethical considerations into their decision making. Topic: Ethics and Social Responsibility |
82. | Establishing _____ involves a business to resolve to place moral concerns ahead of other concerns in cases where either the fundamental rights of stakeholders or key moral principles have been violated.
Moral intent implies that a business must resolve to place moral concerns ahead of other concerns in cases where either the fundamental rights of stakeholders or key moral principles have been violated. |
AACSB: Ethics Accessibility: Keyboard Navigation Blooms: Remember Difficulty: 1 Easy Gradable: automatic Learning Objective: 05-05 Explain how managers can incorporate ethical considerations into their decision making. Topic: Ethics and Social Responsibility |
83. | Which of the following enables managers to walk away from a decision that is profitable, but unethical?
It is important to recognize that employees in an international business may need significant moral courage. Moral courage enables managers to walk away from a decision that is profitable but unethical. |
AACSB: Ethics Accessibility: Keyboard Navigation Blooms: Remember Difficulty: 1 Easy Gradable: automatic Learning Objective: 05-05 Explain how managers can incorporate ethical considerations into their decision making. Topic: Ethical Decision Making |
84. | What is the term for a company’s formal statement of the ethical priorities it expects all of its employees to follow?
Many companies explicitly articulate values that emphasize ethical behavior by drafting a code of ethics, which is a formal statement of the ethical priorities a business adheres to. |
AACSB: Ethics Accessibility: Keyboard Navigation Blooms: Remember Difficulty: 1 Easy Gradable: automatic Learning Objective: 05-05 Explain how managers can incorporate ethical considerations into their decision making. Topic: Ethics and Social Responsibility |
85. | Business ethics that either deny the value of business ethics or apply the concept in a very unsatisfactory way are termed _____.
Straw men approaches to business ethics are raised by business ethics scholars primarily to demonstrate that they offer inappropriate guidelines for ethical decision making in a multinational enterprise. |
AACSB: Ethics Accessibility: Keyboard Navigation Blooms: Remember Difficulty: 1 Easy Gradable: automatic Learning Objective: 05-04 Describe the different philosophical approaches to ethics. Topic: Philosophical Approaches to Ethics |
86. | Which of the following ethical theories explicitly rejects the idea that businesses should undertake social expenditures beyond those mandated by the law and required for the efficient running of a business?
Friedman’s basic position is that the only social responsibility of business is to increase profits, so long as the company stays within the rules of law. He explicitly rejects the idea that businesses should undertake social expenditures beyond those mandated by the law and required for the efficient running of a business. |
AACSB: Ethics Accessibility: Keyboard Navigation Blooms: Apply Difficulty: 2 Medium Gradable: automatic Learning Objective: 05-04 Describe the different philosophical approaches to ethics. Topic: Philosophical Approaches to Ethics |
87. | A(n) _____ asserts that if a manager of a multinational sees that firms from other nations are not following ethical norms in a host nation, that manager should not either.
A naive immoralist asserts that if a manager of a multinational sees that firms from other nations are not following ethical norms in a host nation, that manager should not either. |
AACSB: Ethics Accessibility: Keyboard Navigation Blooms: Understand Difficulty: 1 Easy Gradable: automatic Learning Objective: 05-04 Describe the different philosophical approaches to ethics. Topic: Philosophical Approaches to Ethics |
88. | Any person or institution that is capable of moral action such as a government or corporation is a(n) _____.
A moral agent is any person or institution that is capable of moral action such as a government or corporation. |
AACSB: Ethics Accessibility: Keyboard Navigation Blooms: Understand Difficulty: 1 Easy Gradable: automatic Learning Objective: 05-04 Describe the different philosophical approaches to ethics. Topic: Philosophical Approaches to Ethics |
89. | Under the veil of ignorance, everyone is imagined to be ignorant of:
Under the veil of ignorance, everyone is imagined to be ignorant of all of his or her particular characteristics, for example, race, sex, intelligence, nationality, family background, and special talents. |
AACSB: Ethics Accessibility: Keyboard Navigation Blooms: Understand Difficulty: 1 Easy Gradable: automatic Learning Objective: 05-04 Describe the different philosophical approaches to ethics. Topic: Philosophical Approaches to Ethics |
90. | _____ are the accepted principles of right or wrong governing the conduct of businesspeople.
Business ethics are the accepted principles of right or wrong governing the conduct of businesspeople. |
AACSB: Ethics Accessibility: Keyboard Navigation Blooms: Remember Difficulty: 1 Easy Gradable: automatic Learning Objective: 05-01 Understand the ethical issues faced by international businesses. Topic: Ethical Issues in International Business |
91. | The veil of ignorance was developed by _____ as part of his approach to justice theories.
The veil of ignorance was developed by John Rawls as part of his approach to justice theories. According to Rawls, valid principles of justice are those with which all persons would agree if they could freely and impartially consider the situation. Impartiality is guaranteed by the veil of ignorance. Under the veil of ignorance, everyone is imagined to be ignorant of all of his/her particular characteristics. Under these conditions everyone would agree that (1) each person be permitted the maximum amount of basic liberty compatible with a similar liberty for others, and (2) once basic liberty is assured, inequality in basic social goods is to be allowed only if such inequalities benefit everyone. |
AACSB: Ethics Accessibility: Keyboard Navigation Blooms: Remember Difficulty: 1 Easy Gradable: automatic Learning Objective: 05-04 Describe the different philosophical approaches to ethics. Topic: Philosophical Approaches to Ethics |
92. | Often, the code of ethics draws heavily upon documents such as the _____, which itself is grounded in Kantian and rights-based theories of moral philosophy.
A code of ethics is a formal statement of the ethical priorities a business adheres to. Often, the code of ethics draws heavily upon documents such as the UN Universal Declaration of Human Rights, which itself is grounded in Kantian and rights-based theories of moral philosophy. |
AACSB: Ethics Accessibility: Keyboard Navigation Blooms: Apply Difficulty: 2 Medium Gradable: automatic Learning Objective: 05-05 Explain how managers can incorporate ethical considerations into their decision making. Topic: Ethics and Social Responsibility |
93. | Which of the following is a reason why managers behave in a manner that is unethical?
The causes that contribute to unethical behavior in businesses are very complex. However, a few generalizations can be made. Unethical behavior is rooted in poor personal ethics, societal culture, the psychological and geographical distances of a foreign subsidiary from the home office, a failure to incorporate ethical issues into strategic and operational decision making, a dysfunctional culture, and failure of leaders to act in an ethical manner. |
AACSB: Ethics Accessibility: Keyboard Navigation Blooms: Apply Difficulty: 2 Medium Gradable: automatic Learning Objective: 05-03 Identify the causes of unethical behavior by managers. Topic: Causes of Unethical Behavior |
94. | In the international business setting, one of the most common ethical issues involves _____.
Many of the ethical issues and dilemmas in international business are rooted in the fact that political systems, law, economic development, and culture vary significantly from nation to nation. Therefore, what might be considered a normal business practice in one country may constitute unethical behavior in another country. Managers in a multinational company need to be sensitive to these differences and choose the ethical action in those circumstances where variation across societies creates the potential for ethical problems. In the international business setting, the most common ethical issues involve employment practices, human rights, environmental regulations, corruption, and the moral obligation of multinational corporations. |
AACSB: Ethics Accessibility: Keyboard Navigation Blooms: Apply Difficulty: 2 Medium Gradable: automatic Learning Objective: 05-01 Understand the ethical issues faced by international businesses. Topic: Ethical Issues in International Business |
95. | The _____ obliges member states to make the bribery of foreign public officials a criminal offense and excludes facilitating payments made to expedite routine government action from the convention.
In 1997, the OECD adopted the Convention on Combating Bribery of Foreign Public Officials in International Business Transactions. The convention obliges member states to make the bribery of foreign public officials a criminal offense. The convention excludes facilitating payments made to expedite routine government action from the convention. |
AACSB: Ethics Accessibility: Keyboard Navigation Blooms: Apply Difficulty: 2 Medium Gradable: automatic Learning Objective: 05-01 Understand the ethical issues faced by international businesses. Topic: Key Regulations Governing Ethics and Social Responsibility |
Essay Questions
96. | Discuss how companies such as Exxon, Kodak, and IBM helped improve human rights in South Africa. During the 1980s, many American companies doing business in South Africa realized that following the Sullivan principles of not obeying apartheid laws and trying to promote their abolition was not a sufficiently ethical strategy. Consequently, many companies divested their holdings in the nation. At the same time, the U.S. government and other nations imposed economic sanctions on the country. Together, these actions helped bring about democratic elections in the nation in 1994, and an end to white minority rule. |
AACSB: Ethics Blooms: Analyze Difficulty: 3 Hard Gradable: manual Learning Objective: 05-01 Understand the ethical issues faced by international businesses. Topic: Ethical Issues in International Business |
97. | Should a multinational feel free to pollute in a developing nation? This question is designed to stimulate classroom discussion or the personal opinion of the student. Issues that might emerge include whether there is any danger that a moral management might move production to a developing nation precisely because costly pollution controls are not required, the notion that the environment is public good that no one owns, but that anyone can despoil, human-induced global warming, and legality of various actions. |
AACSB: Ethics Blooms: Evaluate Difficulty: 3 Hard Gradable: manual Learning Objective: 05-01 Understand the ethical issues faced by international businesses. Topic: Ethical Issues in International Business |
98. | In your opinion, are bribes ever acceptable? Why or why not? This question is designed to allow the students to explore the idea of bribery as possibly resulting in a positive rather than a negative outcome. Some economists have suggested that corruption might in fact improve efficiency and help growth. Others however, argue that corruption simply reduces the returns on business investment and leads to low economic growth. |
AACSB: Ethics Blooms: Evaluate Difficulty: 3 Hard Gradable: manual Learning Objective: 05-01 Understand the ethical issues faced by international businesses. Topic: Ethical Issues in International Business |
99. | Discuss the notion of social responsibility. What does it mean for corporations? The concept of social responsibility refers to the idea that businesspeople should consider the social consequences of economic actions when making business decisions, and that there should be a presumption in favor of decisions that have both good economic and social consequences. In a business setting, social responsibility means that benevolent behavior is the responsibility of successful enterprises. |
AACSB: Ethics Blooms: Analyze Difficulty: 3 Hard Gradable: manual Learning Objective: 05-01 Understand the ethical issues faced by international businesses. Topic: Ethics and Social Responsibility |
100. | What are ethical dilemmas? Why do they exist? Ethical dilemmas are situations in which none of the available alternatives seems ethically acceptable. Ethical dilemmas exist because many real-world decisions are complex, difficult to frame, and involve first-, second-, and third-order consequences that are hard to quantify. To deal with these situations, managers need a moral compass to guide them through the dilemma to find an acceptable solution. |
AACSB: Ethics Blooms: Evaluate Difficulty: 3 Hard Gradable: manual Learning Objective: 05-02 Recognize an ethical dilemma. Topic: Ethical Decision Making |
101. | Why are expatriate managers at a greater risk of violating their personal code of ethics? Expatriate managers may experience more than the usual degree of pressure to violate their personal ethics. They are away from their ordinary social context and supporting culture, and they are psychologically and geographically distant from the parent company. They may be based in a culture that does not place the same value on ethical norms important in the manager’s home country, and they may be surrounded by local employees who have less rigorous ethical standards. The parent company may pressure expatriate managers to meet unrealistic goals that can only be fulfilled by acting unethically. For example, to meet centrally mandated performance goals, expatriate managers might give bribes to win contracts. Local managers might encourage the expatriate to adopt such behavior. Due to its geographical distance, the parent company may be unable to see how expatriate managers are meeting goals, or may choose not to see how they are doing so, allowing such behavior to flourish and persist. |
AACSB: Ethics Blooms: Evaluate Difficulty: 3 Hard Gradable: manual Learning Objective: 05-03 Identify the causes of unethical behavior by managers. Topic: Causes of Unethical Behavior |
102. | Explain the Friedman doctrine. Who developed the philosophy? How well does this approach hold up ethically? In 1970, Milton Friedman suggested that the only social responsibility of business is to increase profits, so long as the company stays within the rules of law. He explicitly rejects the idea that business should undertake social expenditures beyond those mandated by the law and required for the efficient running of a business. Friedman does state that businesses should behave in an ethical manner and not engage in deception and fraud, however, most economists believe that his approach to ethics does not hold up well. For example, even though child labor may not be against the law in a particular country, it is still unethical to use child labor. |
AACSB: Ethics Blooms: Analyze Difficulty: 2 Medium Gradable: manual Learning Objective: 05-04 Describe the different philosophical approaches to ethics. Topic: Philosophical Approaches to Ethics |
103. | Discuss the cultural relativism approach to business ethics. What is the connection between this approach and the phrase “When in Rome do as the Romans”? How well does this approach hold up ethically? The cultural relativism approach is the belief that ethics are nothing more than the reflection of a culture and accordingly, a firm should adopt the ethics of the culture in which it is operating. This approach is often summarized by the maxim “When in Rome do as the Romans.” Cultural relativism does not stand up well to business ethics because it suggests that if a culture allows slavery, then it is acceptable for a firm to use slaves as well. Cultural relativism implicitly rejects the idea that universal notions of morality transcend different cultures, however, some universal notions of morality are found across cultures. |
AACSB: Ethics Blooms: Evaluate Difficulty: 3 Hard Gradable: manual Learning Objective: 05-04 Describe the different philosophical approaches to ethics. Topic: Philosophical Approaches to Ethics |
104. | Discuss the naive immoralist’s approach to business ethics. What are the criticisms of this approach? The naive immoralist asserts that if a manager of a multinational sees that firms from other nations are not following ethical norms in a host nation, that manager should not either. This approach has been criticized with the argument that simply accepting an action as being ethically justified just because everyone is doing it is not sufficient. Moreover, the multinational company does have the ability to change the prevailing practice in the country. |
AACSB: Ethics Blooms: Analyze Difficulty: 3 Hard Gradable: manual Learning Objective: 05-04 Describe the different philosophical approaches to ethics. Topic: Philosophical Approaches to Ethics |
105. | Discuss the utilitarian approach to business ethics. When was this approach developed? What are its drawbacks? The utilitarian approach to business ethics was developed in the 18th and 19th centuries by philosophers such as David Hume, Jeremy Bentham, and John Stuart Mill. The utilitarian approach to ethics holds that the moral worth of actions or practices is determined by their consequences. An action is judged to be desirable if it leads to the best possible balance of good consequences over bad consequences. The best decisions are those that produce the greatest good for the greatest number of people. This approach has certain limitations. One serious drawback of the utilitarian approach is that it is difficult to measure the benefits, costs, and risks of a course of action. A second problem is that the philosophy omits the consideration of justice. |
AACSB: Ethics Blooms: Analyze Difficulty: 3 Hard Gradable: manual Learning Objective: 05-04 Describe the different philosophical approaches to ethics. Topic: Philosophical Approaches to Ethics |
106. | What are the ways in which international business and its managers can ensure that ethical issues are considered in business decisions? An international business and its managers can take several steps to make sure ethical issues are considered in business decisions. Some of these are: (1) favor hiring and promoting people with a well-grounded sense of personal ethics; (2) build an organizational culture that places a high value on ethical behavior; (3) make sure that leaders within the business not only articulate the rhetoric of ethical behavior, but also act in a manner that is consistent with that rhetoric; (4) put decision-making processes in place that require people to consider the ethical dimension of business decisions; and (5) develop moral courage. |
AACSB: Ethics Blooms: Apply Difficulty: 2 Medium Gradable: manual Learning Objective: 05-05 Explain how managers can incorporate ethical considerations into their decision making. Topic: Ethical Decision Making |
107. | Describe the five-step process that businesses can use to think through ethical problems. Some experts on ethics have recommended a five-step process to think through ethical problems. In step 1, businesspeople should identify which stakeholders a decision would affect and in what ways. Stakeholder analysis involves a certain amount of moral imagination. Step 2 involves judging the ethics of the proposed strategic decision, given the information gained in step 1. Managers need to determine whether a proposed decision would violate the fundamental rights of any stakeholders. Step 3 requires managers to establish moral intent. This means the business must resolve to place moral concerns ahead of other concerns in cases where either the fundamental rights of stakeholders or key moral principles have been violated. Step 4 requires the company to engage in ethical behavior. Step 5 requires the business to audit its decisions, reviewing them to make sure they were consistent with ethical principles, such as those stated in the company’s code of ethics. |
AACSB: Ethics Blooms: Apply Difficulty: 2 Medium Gradable: manual Learning Objective: 05-05 Explain how managers can incorporate ethical considerations into their decision making. Topic: Ethical Decision Making |
108. | Why do organizations appoint an ethics officer? To make sure that a business behaves in an ethical manner, a number of firms now have ethics officers. These individuals are responsible for making sure that all employees are trained to be ethically aware, that ethical considerations enter the business decision-making process, and that the company’s code of ethics is followed. Ethics officers may also be responsible for auditing decisions to make sure they are consistent with this code. In many businesses, ethics officers act as an internal ombudsperson with responsibility for handling confidential inquiries from employees, investigating complaints from employees or others, reporting findings, and making recommendations for change. |
AACSB: Ethics Blooms: Evaluate Difficulty: 2 Medium Gradable: manual Learning Objective: 05-05 Explain how managers can incorporate ethical considerations into their decision making. Topic: Ethics and Social Responsibility |
109. | How can companies strengthen the moral courage of employees? Companies can strengthen the moral courage of employees by committing themselves to not retaliate against employees who exercise moral courage, say no to superiors, or otherwise complain about unethical actions. Companies can also set up ethics hotlines, which allow employees to anonymously register a complaint with a corporate ethics officer. |
AACSB: Ethics Blooms: Apply Difficulty: 2 Medium Gradable: manual Learning Objective: 05-05 Explain how managers can incorporate ethical considerations into their decision making. Topic: Ethical Decision Making |
110. | Explain the concept of moral imagination as it relates to a company’s stakeholders. All stakeholders are in an exchange relationship with the company. Each stakeholder group supplies the organization with important resources (or contributions), and in exchange each expects its interests to be satisfied by inducements. Stakeholder analysis involves a certain amount of what has been called moral imagination. This means standing in the shoes of a stakeholder and asking how a proposed decision might impact that stakeholder. |
AACSB: Ethics Blooms: Apply Difficulty: 2 Medium Gradable: manual Learning Objective: 05-05 Explain how managers can incorporate ethical considerations into their decision making. Topic: Ethical Decision Making |
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