|
Business
Ethics is a complex and difficult topic to study and it is
also difficult to teach. Given how many ethical problems have
affected the corporate world in the past ten years [e.g.,
Enron, Tyco, and Boeing] it seems imperative that the topic
be given renewed attention. Global communication is
regulated by local regulation. What is allowed as free
speech on the internet in the United States may
not be allowed in China or other countries. To what extent
do American business like Google and Microsoft have an
ethical duty to take American views of free speech into the
world marketplace, or should they adapt to standards of each
local market or country. Put another way, should they assist
the government of another country in suppressing dissent, or
arresting dissidents. Put in its most stark context, there
is an allegation that prior to World War II the American
corporation ITT sold technology to the Nazi’s that helped
them round up Jews for extermination. Whether true or not,
it shows the ethical pitfalls that technology may cause for
businesses that is best seen in hindsight, and is therefore
most difficult to recognize when it arises. Another example
is that in many countries it is now illegal for individuals
to express support for Nazi ideas or to sell Nazi
memorabilia. Those things are legal in the United States.
So EBay is not totally global. On these and other issues it
may have to, or perhaps should, comply with local regulation
or sensibilities.
This paper
considers what we mean by business ethics, where business
ethics originate, how business ethics are studied from an
academic perspective, and how they are actually used, or not
used, in the business world [particularly in the United
States and China]. Living by a set of business ethics in the
United States not only prevents corporate
scandal, but also improves workplace morale as well as
corporate relations with government and the public [cf.,
Johnson & Johnson]. In the United States there is a
generally held view that the internet is a place of free
speech, where the market-place of ideas is best left free of
government regulation. While there may well be some
significant exceptions, most people in the United States can
write most anything in emails and not expect to be censored
or arrested. Google and Microsoft do not, so far as we know,
assist governmental agencies in the United States in
censorship or arresting individual dissidents.
Comparing
American and Chinese perspectives on business ethics is a
worthwhile undertaking for many reasons. Recent press
coverage addresses the rise of China as a world
economic power. Companies such as Microsoft and Yahoo now
offer Chinese friendly software which filters not for junk
email, or hackers, but for the words freedom and justice.
This paper suggests how American business should deal with
issues like this that arise in the course of globalization.
Global internet communication is not totally global; it is
limited and regulated locally. That is what makes for
ethical dilemmas that are considered in this presentation.
Finally, one
hopes and expects that most business, and most people in
business, want to work with smart and articulate individuals,
individuals trained in the liberal arts, who are open to
change, and who engage in self-aware business practices. We
expect and rely on ethically sound businesses, and surviving
in the global market-place requires understanding other
cultures and their view of business ethics, as well as our
own notions of business ethics.
|