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Topics Covered
- Series conclusion
- Business ethics and CSR review
- Key issues for the future
- Definition of a good business
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Talk Citation
Mayer, D. (2023, September 28). Business ethics for the future [Video file]. In The Business & Management Collection, Henry Stewart Talks. Retrieved November 23, 2024, from https://doi.org/10.69645/ORGE8848.Export Citation (RIS)
Publication History
Other Talks in the Series: Business Ethics: Theory and Practice
Transcript
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0:00
I'm Don Mayer.
I teach at the
University of Denver,
and this is lecture eight,
Business Ethics for the Future.
0:09
In this final lecture, I will
refer back to some key points
from the first seven lectures
about business ethics
and what has been called
corporate social responsibility.
Humanity faces a number of
key issues for the future:
climate change,
growing inequality,
the impact of artificial
intelligence,
rampant disinformation
on social media,
and an evident decline in
democratic values around the world.
These issues will not be
addressed effectively
without ethical leaders in
business and in politics,
and with ethically
minded citizens
that can discern truth from falsehood
and reject false narratives
about themselves, the
market, and the public good.
0:48
To begin with,
while most people see ethics
as highly subjective,
there are certain
constants in the way
that others will judge
you or your business.
Your reputation matters,
and you can count on
most people to judge you
more critically than
you judge yourself.
The core values of
trustworthiness,
respect, caring, fairness,
responsibility and citizenship
are deemed important by most
people in the United States
and other industrialized
democracies.
Those who deem ethics to
be hopelessly subjective
overlook the fact that
humans are social creatures
who have thrived on this planet
primarily through cooperation.
If you want others to
cooperate with you,
you must demonstrate
that you are trustworthy
and care about others in ways that
your core values would have you act.
We also know that
legal compliance
is not the same as
ethical excellence,
and that people's goodwill is a
valuable asset for any business.
That goodwill depends
on your good conduct.
You cannot be ethical
just by obeying the laws.
At many times and
in many places,
the laws do not reflect
the will of the people,
but may be arbitrary and unfair,
created and maintained by those
with superior wealth and power.
Complying with laws that allow
exploitation of other human beings
is no claim to
ethical excellence.
The US divisions of
Cargill, ADM, and Nestlé
all profit from slave
labor in the Ivory Coast,
and it is legal
for them to do so.
Many companies legally undermine
competitive free markets
by seeking and using monopoly
power, fixing prices,
polluting the air,
ground and water,
and rent seeking,
asking for all kinds of favors from
local, state, and federal governments.
We also know that
making huge profits
is not the same as real success,
in terms of contributing
to the public good.
A good business will have a
purpose that keeps everyone
in the organization focused on
more than just making money.
Paul O'Neill's
Alcoa, for example,
stands in stark contrast to
the Wall Street securitizers
who were okay with selling
a toxic investment,
knowing that they would not have
to live with the consequences.
Acting on the core values of honesty,
caring, responsibility and fairness
would have made this
unthinkable and undoable.
But the ethos of
the business world,
not the ethics, often does
put profits before people.
Short-termism is everywhere
in our personal lives,
and especially in businesses
that are tethered to
the number for quarterly
earnings calls.
Living in the short term can blind
us to our long-term interests,
individually and corporately.
Many in business spend most of
their time putting out brush fires,
patching things up,
just getting by,
when long-term thinking
would require investing time
and money in long-term goals.
Robert Jackall's example of the
coking battery speaks volumes.
It flips around the old saying,
"Never put off till tomorrow
what you can do today."
In his example, procrastination
actually becomes
an internal political strategy
driven by short-termism.
Even in this example,
shareholders are shortchanged
in the long run by those
short-term motivations.
Silence is not golden,
as the common practice
of killing the messenger
or the whistle-blower will sweep
difficult issues under the carpet.
Organizations where no one
dares speak the truth to power
are morally-deficient and usually
financially inefficient as well.
Corporate social responsibility
has sought to nudge businesses
into a more active social
and environmental awareness.
That corporations are still
tethered to the old narrative
that profits is the only
metric that matters,
and that we can get there by
rationally maximizing the
self-interest of the corporation.
Yet behavioral psychology
gives us some key insights