Monday, August 19, 2019
Business Ethics Essay -- GCSE Business Marketing Coursework
Business Ethics  	  The statement has been made that "ethics has no place  in business" and the implications of this statement and its  inferring characteristics provide a complex issue in the  operation of national and multinational corporations.  Because ethical decision making is often not as profitable  as choices that do not embrace ethical elements, the  perspective has emerged that the nature of an effective  business mindset inherently brings about unethical behavior.  In order to consider this statement and its  implications, it is necessary to recognize the ethical  decision-making processes of a number of companies, and  reflect upon the fiscal, organizational and operational  implications of ethical choices and then relate this process  to the perceived outcomes if the opposite choices were made.  As an element of this evaluation, it is also necessary to  consider the nature of morality and the progression of moral  underpinnings for business operations and the implications  as companies expand into multinational arenas.    Ethics can be described as: "the activity of examining  one's moral standards or the moral standards of a society,  and asking how these standards apply to our lives" (11).  The application of ethics in business is generally perceived  as the evaluation of individual and collective moral  standards, a reflection of societal morality, and then the  determination of business decisions that are not only based  on the efficacy of business operations, but also on these  moral standards. The problem that many corporations  perceive when pursuing the application of ethics in business  is that ethical choices are not always the most sound  business decisions. For example, when the pharmaceutical  corporatio...              ...issue as a whole. Individuals have a moral responsibility  to take ethical action, and there is no way of denying that  corporations are made up of individuals attempting to make  both business and ethical determinations.    Business ethics, then, must focus not only on the  issues related to preventing harm to others, but also taking  action that negates the passive process of allowing harm to  happen. In the example of Merck, the company pursued their  ethical choice not because they would be causing harm if  they did not make this determination, but because if they  did not take this action, they would be allowing harm to  occur (48). Though it cannot be expected that every company  will take this kind of action, at the very least,  corporations, both national and multinational, have to  determine operational ethics that prevent them from causing  harm to others.                        
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