5. Ethics of Accounting
Accounting ethics is primarily a field of
applied ethics, the study of moral
values and judgments as they apply
to accountancy.
It is an example of professional ethics.
6. Accounting ethics were first introduced
by Luca Pacioli, and later expanded
by government groups, professional
organizations,
and
independent
companies.
Ethics are taught in accounting courses
at higher education institutions as well
as by companies training accountants
and auditors.
8. ISSUES CONT..
Executive compensation:
concerns excessive payments
made to corporate CEO's and
top management.
9.
10.
11. Ethics of Human Resource
Mgt.
The ethics of human resource
management (HRM) covers
those ethical issues arising
around the employer-employee
relationship, such as the rights
and duties owed between
employer and employee.
12. ISSUES
Discrimination issues include
discrimination on the bases of
age (ageism), gender, race,
religion, disabilities, weight
and attractiveness, affirmative
action, sexual harassment.
13. ISSUES CONT..
Issues
arising
from the
traditional
view
of
relationships
between
employers and employees,
also
known
as
At-will
employment.
14. ISSUES CONT..
Issues surrounding the
representation of employees and
the democratization of the
workplace: union busting, strike
breaking.
Issues affecting the privacy of the
employee: workplace
surveillance, drug testing.
Issues affecting the privacy of the
employer: whistle-blowing.
15. ISSUES CONT..
Issues relating to the fairness of
the employment contract and
the balance of power between
employer and employee:
slavery, indentured servitude,
employment law.
Occupational safety and health.
16.
17.
18. Ethics of Sales and
Marketing
Marketing ethics is the area of
applied ethics which deals with the
moral
principles
behind
the
operation
and
regulation
of
marketing. Some areas of marketing
ethics (ethics of advertising and
promotion) overlap with media
ethics.
19. ISSUES
Pricing: price fixing, price
discrimination, price skimming.
Price skimming is a pricing strategy in
which a marketer sets a relatively high
price for a product or service at first,
then lowers the price over time.
20. ISSUES
Anti-competitive practices: these
include but go beyond pricing tactics
to cover issues such as
manipulation of loyalty and supply
chains.
21. ISSUES
Specific marketing strategies:
greenwash, bait and switch,
shill, viral marketing, spam
(electronic), pyramid scheme,
planned obsolescence.
22. ISSUES CONT..
Content
of advertisements:
attack ads, subliminal
messages, sex in advertising,
products regarded as immoral or
harmful
Children and marketing:
marketing in schools.
Black markets, grey markets.
23.
24.
25. Ethics of Production
This
area of business ethics
deals with the duties of a
company to ensure that products
and production processes do not
cause harm.
26. Ethics of Production
Some
of the more acute
dilemmas in this area arise
out of the fact that there is
usually a degree of danger in
any product or production
27. Ethics of Production
And
it is difficult to define a
degree of permissibility, or the
degree of permissibility may
depend on the changing state of
preventative
technologies
or
changing social perceptions of
acceptable risk.
28. Defective, addictive and inherently
dangerous products and services
(e.g. tobacco, alcohol, weapons,
motor vehicles, chemical
manufacturing, bungee jumping).
Ethical relations between the
company and the environment:
pollution, environmental ethics,
carbon emissions trading.
29. Ethical problems arising out of
new technologies: genetically
modified food, mobile phone
radiation and health.
Product testing ethics: animal
rights and animal testing, use of
economically disadvantaged
groups (such as students) as test
objects.