Chapter 10 Flashcards
What is ethics?
Ethics is a branch of philosophy, whether there is any objective right and wrong, and how we know it if there is.
What three types of inquiry has ethics?
- 1 Normative ethics provides theories about what is the right thing to do and why this is so.
- 2 Practical ethics is about what is the right thing to do in a specific situation.
- 3 Meta-ethics considers the very concepts of ‘right’ and ‘wrong’ and where they come from.
Which ethical theories can we distinguish?
In respect of normative ethical theories, we can distinguish between consequentialist (or teleological) moral and non-consequentialist (or deontological) moral theories.
What are Teleological theories?
Teleological moral theories base moral judgements on the consequences of decisions and actions
What are Deontological theories?
Deontological moral theories hold that decisions and actions can be wrong irrespective of their positive or negative outcomes. Objectivism or non-relativism is the belief that there is right and wrong.
What is a belief of ethical values?
The belief that ethical values and beliefs are relative to individuals and societies and that objective moral judgement is not possible is called ethical relativism.
What are business ethics?
Business ethics is a practice that determines what is right, wrong, and appropriate in the workplace. Making economic decisions in a business context often involves evaluating the alternative economic actions from strategic, commercial, financial and legal perspectives.
What are the four defining characteristics for a free market capitalist economic system?
1 Private ownership of the means of production
2 Competition.
3 The division of capital and labour
4 The profit motive
What is private ownership?
Private ownership as opposed to state ownership and communal ownership is the predominant mode of owning the means of production in a capitalist economy. Different levels of state ownership and communal ownership of business organizations will still exist in most countries.
What is the assumption of competition through laws and demand?
The assumption is that competition, through the laws of supply and demand, is the way in which markets allocate scarce resources to their most valued (in financial terms) uses. The profit motive is what incentivizes entrepreneurs to engage in the creative and inventive business activity that has given us the products and services in the market today. Their self-interest works in the public interest through the invisible hand of the market.
When does free market capitalism work best?
When governments set the rules that govern them—such as laws that ensure property rights—and support markets with proper infrastructure, such as roads and highways to move goods and people.
What is CSR
CSR is also called corporate responsibility. Others refer to CSR as ‘Environmental, Social and Governance responsibility’ (ESG). ESG recognizes that it is not only about ‘(a) the definitions of the responsibilities to society at large, [but it is also about] (b) how these responsibilities are defined and negotiated, and (c) how they are managed and organized’
What four types of responsibilities do companies have?
- 1 The economic responsibility to produce goods and services that society wants in order to be profitable and survive.
- 2 The legal responsibility to play by the rules and obey the law in the jurisdictions where it operates.
- 3 The ethical responsibility to do what is right, just and fair and to avoid doing harm.
- 4 The philanthropic responsibility to contribute to the community and be a good corporate citizen.
What is Freeman’s stakeholder theory?
Freeman’s stakeholder theory of strategic management is compatible with and related to Stakeholder Theory in corporate governance, which adopts the same instrumental approach. The stakeholder approach is also consistent with the Entity Theory in financial accounting.
What rules does directive 2014/95/EU set out?
Directive 2014/95/EU sets out the rules on disclosure of non-financial and diversity information by large companies. Large public-interest companies with more than 500 employees are required to include non-financial statements in their annual reports;