T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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1051.1 | Probably OK in the UK, though | 4GL::LASHER | Working... | Mon Jun 28 1993 09:31 | 13 |
| I would probably change
"... nor can mangement abrogate it through failure to inform
themselves."
to
"nor can mangement abrogate it through failure to inform itself."
However, there is probably a better way to word this that avoids this
problem.
Lew Lasher
|
1051.2 | | VMSMKT::KENAH | Escapes,Lies,Truth,Passion,Miracles | Mon Jun 28 1993 09:32 | 9 |
| While the statement you provide doesn't use these words, it implies a
sense of "never" and "always;" that is, it seems to say that a binary,
black/white rule exists that must never be violated, always enforced.
It has been my experience that there are always exceptions to
generalized statements -- including this one.
It has also been my experience that trying to force reality into the
mold of a rigid moral framework causes major upheaval in the participants.
|
1051.3 | Very fuzzy paragraph | TLE::JBISHOP | | Mon Jun 28 1993 09:36 | 18 |
| You might want to argue that the "stakeholder" idea is morally flawed.
Businesses are owned by the stock-holders. Everyone else is related
by contracts and has no ownership rights. So you could say:
It is unethical (given the assumption of ownership and private
property) for managers to enrich themselves at the expense of
stockholders. It is not only ethical for them to enrich the
stockholders at the expense of the rest, it is their legal duty
as employees of the stockholders.
The paragraph is full of undefined terms and implicit argument (e.g.
"any reasonable definition" is a blatent attempt to force the reader
to accept the writer's definition). Attack those points. Why so
many emotionally loaded words? What's being covered up? What's
"fair"?
-John Bishop
|
1051.4 | | VMSMKT::KENAH | Escapes,Lies,Truth,Passion,Miracles | Mon Jun 28 1993 11:15 | 19 |
| Following up on John's statement (attack the paragraph):
Under any reasonable definition of "business ethics" [whose?}
...businesses must make full, fair and timely disclosure of the current
and prospective state of their business to all stakeholders
(shareholders, employees, vendors, etc.). [why?]
This responsibility can not be mitigated by the adverse nature of any
such disclosure nor can mangement abrogate it through failure to inform
themselves. [restate in English, please]
Deniability is not an ethical strategy. It is inherently [why?]
unethical for management to enrich themselves and harm their
stakeholders through failure to meet this responsibility. [which
responsibility?]
andrew
|
1051.5 | Restatement | TLE::JBISHOP | | Mon Jun 28 1993 11:57 | 21 |
| re .4, restatement:
This responsibility [to report]
o can not be mitigated by the adverse nature of any
such disclosure
"Even if reporting hurts you, you still have to report"
o nor can mangement abrogate it through failure to inform
themselves.
"Even if you don't know, you are still obligated to report"
(ignorance, real or feigned, is no defense).
Note: trade secrets, company confidential material, internal
data and so on are all recognized by US law as things
that are not part of the state of the business which must
be reported.
-John Bishop
|
1051.6 | | PASTIS::MONAHAN | humanity is a trojan horse | Mon Jun 28 1993 23:57 | 10 |
| If you want a debate on morality or legality rather than the
sentence structure and semantics of .0 then you could probably find a
better forum.
I suspect our resident expert on Japanese culture (Norman?) could
confirm that "moral" treatment of employees varies widely from culture
to culture, and laws certainly do. Those DEC employees that are not
native English speakers tend to find this conference a little
intimidating, but would probably make a valuable contribution in some
other forum.
|
1051.7 | | JIT081::DIAMOND | Pardon me? Or must I be a criminal? | Tue Jun 29 1993 00:49 | 20 |
| >I suspect our resident expert on Japanese culture (Norman?)
I am hardly as much of an expert as most of my co-workers are :-)
>could confirm that "moral" treatment of employees varies widely from
>culture to culture,
As a matter of fact, I doubt it. "Moral" treatment of employees seems
to be uniformly absent in every culture.
>and laws certainly do.
Yup.
I also wondered about .0; did the person want to disagree on whether
business ethics requires some ethics or on the wording of the requirement.
Hmm, maybe we should add "business ethics" to the oxymoron note.
-- Norman Diamond
|
1051.8 | | VMSMKT::KENAH | Escapes,Lies,Truth,Passion,Miracles | Tue Jun 29 1993 07:37 | 3 |
| >Hmm, maybe we should add "business ethics" to the oxymoron note.
Second!
|
1051.9 | | CASPRO::LMARINO | | Tue Jun 29 1993 08:15 | 6 |
| re .8
I suppose what I am really trying to ask is what logical reasons are
there for businesses not disclosing information to their stakeholders.
|
1051.10 | The usual suspects | TLE::JBISHOP | | Tue Jun 29 1993 08:43 | 29 |
| re .8
Sure (but as noted, it's not Joy-of-lex material):
o Plans and strategies need to be kept secret or
competitive advantage will be lost, e.g.:
- New products
- New processes
- New markets
- New marketing techniques
- Plans for same
o Contractual obligations may prevent disclosure
(e.g. Company A uses company B's process to do X;
Company B protects this with trade secret, so company
A may not legally expose the secret of the X process).
o Financial results may not be partially released
(contractual obligation with most securites exchanges),
thus Q4 results can't be leaked to some persons and not
to others (note this is a ban on partial releases, not
on release in general).
o Employee-private data (e.g. records of medical expenses)
should not be released.
-John Bishop
|
1051.11 | | WHO301::BOWERS | Dave Bowers @WHO | Wed Jun 30 1993 13:46 | 6 |
| With regard to contractual obligations, Digital's SI organization
frequently finds itself doing working for clients under a
non-disclosure agreement. On occasion, disclosure of the very
existence of the project has been a prohibited act.
\dave
|
1051.12 | | JIT081::DIAMOND | Pardon me? Or must I be a criminal? | Wed Jun 30 1993 20:03 | 22 |
| "This employee didn't do her job. She needs to be fired."
-- "And what job was that?"
"I can't tell you. But she violated the contract."
-- "And what contract was that?"
"I can't tell you. You have to believe me."
-- "But you're sure she was bound by the contract?"
"I can't tell you."
-- "But there was a contract?"
"I can't tell you."
-- "But you already told me she violated it, so it must have existed.
Sounds like you have to fire yourself."
"Nope. Logic is no longer permitted in this company."
|
1051.13 | :-) | MIMS::GULICK_L | When the impossible is eliminated... | Thu Jul 01 1993 02:43 | 14 |
| re. .7
} >could confirm that "moral" treatment of employees varies widely from
} >culture to culture,
}
} As a matter of fact, I doubt it. "Moral" treatment of employees seems
} to be uniformly absent in every culture.
}
Thus establishing Norman as a noter whose entries are worthy of attention.
Well said and worth repeating.
Lew Gulick
|
1051.14 | howcum? | AUSSIE::WHORLOW | Bushies do it for FREE! | Mon Jul 05 1993 00:21 | 35 |
| G'day,
In my course, we too have been told "full disclosure" is the way
to go - and for many of the reasons in the last note of two...
But also, for example, by putting what should be financial leases as
expense leases, the actual inherent liability is shielded from the
prying eyes of the company balance sheet and financialreports. This
gives an incorrect picture of the state of the company.
(an australian company shielded a multi million $$ lease this way and
got found out.... caused a real stink.
So ethically, one must be fair to investors and creditors alike to
enable them to make reasoned judgements to invest, or to withhold
demanding payments...Hard to refute, I fear.
Onthe other hand, if one wants to indulge in sharp practices, hide and
distort figures to make the folk who take your evidence on trust happy
(or happier than they should be) then full disclosure is out.
*****Full disclosure is not meant to cover matters of commercial
confidence, merely those of public knowledge and available from the
company's published reports.****
Similarly, we are told, employees should be made aware of a company's
situation, so as to evoke an understanding of why say overtime is not
available, but the work is there and needing doing.... or somesuch.
I am interested to know why (and how) you disagree with the
sentiments...
derek
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