Ethical Theories: LVL 1 - Self Centered
Ethical Theories: LVL 1 - Self Centered
Ethical Theories: LVL 1 - Self Centered
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Exam : Comment whether code or ethics is more important
CODE VS ETHICS J’2011 10% Q in ensuring good practices.
5) To solve this problem, directors of PLC need to raise professional standards and ingrain integrity into their
corporate cultures and day-to-day operations as investors will not tolerate any misconduct and even
performance shortcomings
6) This is because fraudulent FR and insider trading often involve senior personnel of company who take
advantage of loopholes in law and inherent limitations in the ICs
7) It can be seen that the underlying problem lies with the mentality of human since corporation is controlled
and managed by human
8) Directors and mgnt need to walk the talk which means they must practice what they preach to ensure there
is buy-in across the whole company – this represent tone at the top and also signifies the strength of control
environment which will have an implication on the control procedures
9) The message of regulation is clear, breach the rules and you go to jail – this will only create fear and it will
not work in a long run as some directors are risk taker and some will find way to avoid being caught – this is
due to the rule based approach is not actually making people understand and appreciate what they are
doing
10) Rule-based codes encourage creative, loophole-based accounting and it is impossible to include every
situations that PA will encounter into the rules
11) In contrast, ethical principles are all-embracing, flexible and can be applied in every situation as it uses the
exercise of judgement
12) the target object should not be the corporation but the human being since the soul of corporation is human
13) CG is manifested as an external, outside-in rules and reg to legislate the corporation
14) HG on the other hand is inside-out values-based conviction to guide the human – personal values, ethical
principles which is the beliefs that resulted in the actions – ethics do pay
15) CG is not the solution because the corporation are ultimately run by people who are central to the decision
making process and it is therefore this element that requires most attention
16) At the same time, ethical company will be sincere in maintaining good relationship with investors which will
ensure that the PLC is able to provide the necessary transparency to developments so as to build a LT
relationship of trust and confidence
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ARGUMENTS FOR ETHICAL CONDUCTS / BENEFITS OF ETHICAL BEHAVIOUR / IMPORTANCE OF ETHICS
1) Can avoid criticisms by external pressure group such as NGO – which can have implications on company’s
reputation
2) Structured ethical decision making is good risk management – the public is more likely to look kindly on a
company that it perceives as doing bis ethically than on one which is not particular about how it makes its
money – this require the company to establish its own code of business ethics voluntarily
3) There is a general tendency that human being would want to associate company with good reputation – this
can helps an orgz to attract and retain talent – reduce recruitment and training cost
4) Ethical company can also attract investment by ethical fund - easier to raise finance
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ETHICAL RELATIVISM VERSUS ABSOLUTISM D’2010 tested (not imp for J’2011)
Ethical Relativism
- Pragmatic approach
- relativist
- ‘SITUATIONAL’
- Different situations, behave differently
- Flexible – know how to react in different kind of situations
- Respect differences
- What is regarded as ethical, morally acceptable is not up to the person to say, it basically look at the majority
of people – depends on the society (can be family or company)
- If majority (society) accepted something as ethical, then it is accepted as ethical and vice versa
- As long as something is accepted by majority of people, even though it’s against our own personal value and
principles, we cannot actually condemn, have to accept it because it is accepted by the majority of people in
the society, in the community that deem it as moral
- Advantages – in an multi-ethnic, multi-religion society, we need people who are relativist who doesn’t
impose their own set of beliefs on the others
- Disadvantages – people see you as a man with no principles
Ethical Absolutism
- Dogmatic approach
- absolutist
- Believe in absolute truth, principle that everyone should follow
- What formulate the absolute truth and principle? ‘’MY principle is the absolute truth’’- what they believe is
the absolute truth and they expect all other people to follow them
- Impose their belief on to others
- Regardless of situation – consistency in practices – want same thing to be done – same approach in all
situations
- Very rigid – not flexible – man of principles
- Advantages – consistency expected in practice – behave consistently
- Disadvantages – not respecting differences – so in certain society that is multi-ethnic, multi-religion – can
create conflict – everyone start to think that their own way is the right way – seen to be arrogant – moral
authoritarian
Moral Minimum
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KOHLBERG’S STAGES OF HUMAN MORAL DEVELOPMENT Exam : Quote someone said ‘…..’ or the action – identify the
level and stage – justify
tested 2 times J’2011
Self-centered
Person’s own interest – justifications persuasive only to the person
Stage 1 : people at this stage will not commit immoral activities for fear of punishment by the
higher authority (law abiding citizens)
Stage 2 : people at this stage do not mind committing immoral activities if fair deal (what
rewards do I get?) exist or that the act will not be found out (chances of being caught)
Stage 3 : people at this level will only undertake activities that are acceptable by his/her social
group in order to be accepted by them
Stage 4 : people at this level believes that social contract (unwritten) exist btw them and the
society such that they would not undertake activities that are harmful to the society
(care extended to society at large) = equivalent view in corporate citizenship
(law abiding citizens)
Unhappy, not contented with the existing law & reg – condemn existing system, current way of doing
things
They prefer their own rules & reg – more reasonable and adequate
Believe their intended way of doing things, own set of principles are better than existing law and reg
Wants change
Stage 5 : people at this stage wants changes to be made because they do not agree with the
existing system, policies or rules & regulation. However, they would undertake the
change in a democratic manner eg enter into dialogue, through negotiation
Stage 6 : people at this stage also wants changes to be made but do not mind creating chaos in
the society as a result of making changes because he/she sees them as a price to pay
eg worker strike (dangerous stage)
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DEONTOLOGICAL AND TELEOLOGICAL APPROACH TO ETHICS (FOUR THEORIES)
Tested once on the approach – application not yet test J’2011 application of theories
Teleological
- Consequentialist approaches
- Based the moral judgement on the outcomes of a certain action
- Relativist – situational
- What is regarded as moral is based on the outcome – if the outcome is moral, then the act itself is moral
- ‘goal’ – outcome – consequences
Deontological
- Non-consequentialist approach
- Based the moral judgement on the underlying principles of the decision maker’s motivation
- Focus on motive & intention – if good, the act itself is ethical
- Absolutist – do not look at outcome/results
- Non-situational - an action is right or wrong is not because we like the consequences they produce but
because the underlying principles is morally right
- ‘duty’ – duty to act ethically
Maxim 2
Treat humanity as an end and never as a means only – an act is deemed ethical if you had treated
the people who work for you with respect and dignity recognizing that they have their own set of
needs and wants instead of regarding them as a tool for your success
Maxim 3
Universally lawgiving – an act is regarded as ethical if when known to others will not result in you
being condemned or criticized
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2) Ethics of rights and justice
Under this theory, there is a duty for everyone to observe the rights of another person and not to
undertake activities that will cause inconvenience or harm to another person
Should respect and protect human rights
Respected equally and fairly
Justice can be defined as the simultaneously fair treatment of individuals in a given situation that
everybody gets what they deserved - no right of an individual is being suppressed as a result of the
action of another person
Living wage – wages paid is low - exploiting the worker
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ETHICAL DECISION-MAKING MODELS
Hierarchy of ethical decision making
- 3 levels
- Level 1 – law abiding – outside-in – lawful decisions governed by legally binding rules
- Level 2 – compliance with the codes of conduct – not rule-based
a) IFAC code b) Code of business ethics
- Level 3 – AAA model
Step 3 – what are the norms, principles and values related to the case?
– if the decision maker is a PA, use IFAC fundamental principles to come out with answer
– for non-PA, you may have to consider the ideas learned in egoism, utilitarianism, ethics of duties
and ethics of rights and justice
Step 5 – what is the best course of action that is consistent with the norms, principles and values identified
in Step 3?
– refer back to step 3
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