Foreign Trade University CSR Class Note
Foreign Trade University CSR Class Note
BUSINESS ETHICS ~
- the study of how ethics and business are connected
- analysis of ethical decision-making in commerce, at 3 levels: idv; org and
political/economic systems
- Business ethics is both normative and descriptive
Describe idv and corporate behavior
Evaluate practices managers and corporation ought or ought not to engage in
❓ Or should it use it research funds to help cure other diseases such as cancer or HIV,
for example, disease for which there are paying customers
❓ And/or should it give rights to develop the drug to a nonprofit or government research
firm
❗ Decision rule: Something is morally good to the extent that it produces a greater balance of
benefits over harms, satisfies the most interests, or minimizes harms for the largest number of
people involved
Weakness
- If we overestimate the pain (costs) and underestimate the benefits, then we will make
flawed decisions
- The majority is not always right; who protects the minority?
(3) Rights-based
Check the UN Declaration of Human Rights
(4) Fairness and justice
💡 Justice as fairness
- Justice involves
Treatig every person and every org as an equal
Giving every person their “due”, that is owned, earned or deserved
Fairness: maing judgements that are free from discrimination
- Distributive justice:
Justice also involves distribution: how do we distribute opportunities, goods,
services, welfare, voting, jobs, offices, and awards fairly?
Priniciples of Distributive Justice
o Equal opportunity
o Need: bringing the worst off up to a level with the rest
o Potentiality: “Most likely to succeed”
o Desert: To those who have earned or deserved (e.g: the best employee or
manager, the Olympic award in sports)
o Utility: Given to the person or organization who is best at producing
positive benefits (e.g: the most promising researcher)
o Egalitarian: Certain things should be distributed equally (voting, health
care access, and environmental protections)
o Lottery, luck or chance
o Libertarian principle: no form of distribution is fair to everyone; all should
be abandoned
(5) Character and virtue
- Viture ethics recognizes that we often act in line with out habits and characters
- Companies, too, usually operate from a dominant logic, an organizational mindset ~
“The way we do things” – the governs corporate decision-making and creates the
character and culture of the organization
- Faced with a difficult dilemma, we might ask what would a person of virtue do, what
would a company acting with integrity do
CHAPTER 2: STAKEHOLDER THEORY
puts shareholders’ interests over and above the interests of customers, suppliers,
employees, and others, as if these interests must conflict with each other. It
understands a business as an essentially hierarchical organization fastened together
with authority to act in the shareholders’ interests
Challenge: tend to focus internally to the firm, and are insufficiently aware of nor attentive
to the interests of other stakeholder groups that might have an impact on the organization
Inward focus
Stakeholder focus
Stakeholders ~ those idv, org and nations that affect or are affected by the company and its
decision
- Basic stakeholders include:
shareholders or owners
customer or clients
employees
managers and executives
suppliers
communities where a company operates or that are affected by business decisions
❗ The environment or ecosystem is also considered a stakeholder
💡 Stakeholder analysis of CASE STUDY: Bayer crop science and the issue of child labor
RELATIVISM ~ a perspective that there not exst universal truths or moral values but instead
they vary from culture to culture, or situation to situation
No right or wrong answers, or behaviors
Descriptive Relativism
~ an observation about the existence of diverse moral beliefs and practices
~ diffenrent customs and moral standards in different cultures
~ cultural relativism
Right and wrong are determined by social standards
Normative Relativism
~ subjectivity and relativity of moral judgments ~ no universal standards for morality
~ moral relativism
No one can judge what’s right or wrong in other ppl, group or culture
Additional form of relativism
Naïve Relativism or Egoism
- Every idv makes moral jugdement
- Only that person can decide what right or right for themselves (who are we to judge
others)
- Moral judgement ~ personal opinion
💡 Problems
- What one think is right today maybe different from one’s belief tomorrow
- How to jugde between these beliefs?
- Morality has to do with interactions in a community or communities
- One’s moral judgements are learned from and affect others
💡 Moral judgements
💡 Problems
- Role conflicts
- Must I always follow the dictates of my role?
- I’m not merely my roles. I can make judgement abt my role assignments
💡 “Accepted practices” (common practices in a community or org) > < “acceptable” – the
right thing to do
To escape social group relativism, one has to appeal to more general norms or
standards than merely org practice
- Gift-giving customs
- Professional standards (healthcare, journalism…)
- Religious morals
- Local customs
These shouldn’t conflict with hypernorms
- Moral minimums: NO lie, cheat, steal, kill, torture, slavery, child labor
- Positive obligations: BE fair, trustworthy, respect freedom, equality, environment,
property rights, NO bribery
- Question authority
- Step out of your box
- Question corporate dominant logic
- Find colleagues who agree with u
- Challenge authority with good arguments
Can we as managers or a company justify this action to oursleves?
Will I as a manager or engineer be proud of this?
Can we support this sort of behavior in all that we do?
17 GOALS OF SDGS
~ Sustainable Developemnt Goals
- Came into effect from 1/1/2016
- Ultimate objective is to gain sustanable development by 2030
- Backed up by a set of 169 detailed targets
- Negotiated and reviewed over 2 year period at UN
Distinction
- Universal
- Integration
- Transformation
(1) No poverty: End poverty in all its forms everywhere
(2) 0 hunger: End hunger, achieve food security and improved nutrition and promote
sustainable agriculture
(3) Good health and well-being: Ensure healthy lives and promote well-being for all at
all ages
(4) Quality education: Ensure inclusive and quality edu for all and promote lifelong
learning
(5) Gender equality: Achieve gender equality and empower women and girls
(6) Clean water and sanitation: Ensure access to water and sanitation for all
(7) Affordable and clean energy: Ensure access to affordable, reliable, sustainable and
modern energy for all
(8) Decent work and economic growth: Promote inclusive and sustainable economic
growth, employment and decent work for all
(9) Industry, innovation and infrastructure: Build resilient infrastructure, promote
sustainable industrialization and foster innovation
(10) Reduce inequality: within and among countries
(11) Sustainable cities and communities: Make cities inclusive, safe, resilient and
sustainable
(12) Responsible consumption and production: Ensure sustainable consumption and
production patterns
(13) Climate action: Take urgent action to combat climate chane and its impact
(14) Life below water: Conserve and sustainably use the oceans and marine resources
(15) Life on land: Sustainably manage forests, combat desertification, halt and reverse
land degrafatoin, halt biodiversity loss
(16) Peace, justice, strong institutions: promote just, peaceful and inclusive society
(17) Partnerships for the goals: Revitalize the global partnership for sustainable
development
- Peace
- Freedom
- Development
- Environment
- Anti corruption
- Human rights
- Labor standard
- environment
CHAPTER 6: CONCERNS WITH BUSINESS IMPACTS
- industrialization
- neo-liberalism
- globalization
- inequality
- business responsibility
CHAPTER 7: STRATEGIC RESPONSES TO SUSTAINABILITY
CSR
~ A range of voluntary measures strategically undertaken by corporations, to reassure the
wider community that business can be trusted, to look after social and environmental interests
without further regulatory intervention
- Defensive CSR
Defusing issues
Deflecting unwanted attention
Lobbying or public relations
- Offensive CSR
Can do a lot more
Expertise
Resources
Capabilities
- Proactive CSR
Pick the right issue
Establish concrete goals and report progress
Deploy company’s key assets
Work in cross-sectoral partnerships
MARKET-BASED ENVIRONMENTALISM
~ market opportunities for business that embrace more environmentally sustainable green
practices
CHAPTER 8: NEW AND SUSTAINABLE BUSINESS STRATEGIES
(1) Circular value creation: the business model should include one or more ways to
close/slow/narrow resource loop
- Recycle
- Repair
- Remanufacture
- Reuse
- Optimize
- Increase efficiency
(2) Value prosposition enabling circularity
- Circular branding
- Premium branding
- Product-service offerings
- Cost reduction
- Cheaper offerings
- Asset sharing
- On-demand production
(3) Circular value network
- Value chain collaboration
- Value network collaboration
- Take back management
- Online platforms
- Localisation
- Activities
- Resources
- Technologies
- Capabilities
- Partner networks
Circular business model innovation
E.g: Value prosposition
- Can be a life-long product with low maintenance and lifecycle cost
- Rela with customer segment can be designed to encourage return of a product after use
Example of circular business – IKEA
KEA is committed to becoming a circular business by 2030. These are the circular loops we
are working with:
Reuse
Once people acquire a product, the product enters the first circular loop of reuse. Reuse is
how we describe the customer use of the product and it includes all aspects of normal product
use and care, such as maintaining its condition and adapting them to the evolving needs of
life. This also includes passing on products and enabling secondhand markets.
Refurbishment
It’s the process by which used, damaged, or non-compliant products are restored to ‘like-new’
condition with limited improvements. This includes repairs and upgrades made by customers
or an after-market service in their home or another location. Through refurbishment, products
are evaluated, cleaned and/or repaired, upgraded, recertified, and eventually released back
into the market.
Remanufacturing
Remanufacturing of products is a process by which usable parts from dismantled products are
used to produce new products, increase resource recovery, and potentially lower the cost for
IKEA.
Recycling
Recycling is how products are transformed into new raw materials, which can then be used
within IKEA or external supply chains. This process is the last step for every product part.
The pre-requisite for a product part to reach this stage in its life cycle is that when relevant, all
possibilities to go through the reuse, refurbishment, or remanufacturing loops have been
considered.