ETHICAL ASSIGNMENT / ESSAYS

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BBA 4751, Business Ethics 1

Course Learning Outcomes for Unit IV Upon completion of this unit, students should be able to:

7. Explore the professional ethics and responsibilities of intermediaries, the responsibilities and loyalties of managers, and the responsibilities of employees to the community.

Reading Assignment In order to access the resource below, you must first log into the myCSU Student Portal and access the ABI/Inform Complete database within the CSU Online Library. Marshall, A. (2002). Coffee-scalding prevention is worth pounds of curing lawsuits. Hotel and Motel

Management, 217(15), 10. Navigate to and read the following sources on the Internet: Muhl, C. J. (2001). The employment-at-will doctrine: Three major exceptions. Monthly Labor Review, 3-11.

Retrieved from http://www.bls.gov/opub/mlr/2001/01/art1full.pdf United States Department of Labor, Occupational Safety & Health Administration. (n.d.). Employer

responsibilities. Retrieved from https://www.osha.gov/as/opa/worker/employer-responsibility.html United States Department of Labor, Occupational Safety & Health Administration. (n.d.). Workers’ rights.

Retrieved from https://www.osha.gov/workers/index.html United States Department of Labor. (n.d.). Summary of the major laws of the Department of Labor. Retrieved

from http://www.dol.gov/opa/aboutdol/lawsprog.htm U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission. (n.d.). Laws enforced by the EEOC. Retrieved from

http://www.eeoc.gov/laws/statutes/ U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission. (n.d.). Employees & job applicants. Retrieved from

http://www.eeoc.gov/employees/

Unit Lesson

Click here to access an introduction video.

Click here to access the introduction video transcript.

UNIT IV STUDY GUIDE

Ethics in Local, State, and Federal Regulations for Business

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Click here to access a video that briefly introduces topics in this unit.

Click here to access the video transcript. Bruce Wayne was an American billionaire, playboy, philanthropist, and owner of Wayne Enterprises. After witnessing the murder of his parents as a child, he swears revenge on criminals throughout Gotham City. Wayne transforms himself both physically and intellectually, and becomes Batman to fight crime. Batman is assisted by the police commissioner Jim Gordon, and Robin—another vigilante ally. Without any form of superhuman powers, Batman must rely on his advanced problem-solving skills along with his exceptional physical abilities. In his crime-fighting, he smashes everything and anything in his path. Batman does not play by the rules—legal or otherwise—in his pursuit. Commissioner Gordon heads Gotham and forms uneasy alliances with Batman, as well as other legal figures, in his shared conquest of rooting out villains from Gotham. He often allows Batman free reign to pursue his brand of justice; however, the superhero sees fit without recrimination. Once, after killing several people, Batman says to the commissioner: “They can never know. I killed those people.” Commissioner Gordon, of course, objects to keeping Batman’s secret, exclaiming that it conflicts with the true identity of who Batman is. Batman responds, “That’s what I can be… I’m whatever Gotham needs me to be. Sometimes truth isn’t good enough. Sometimes people deserve more. Sometimes people deserve to have their faith rewarded.” Batman takes whatever action he deems necessary to “protect” citizens, including their trust and positive outlook of the situation and believes that because he finds it necessary to his overall plan, it is ethical. But is it ethical? Is there no objective standard? Is killing a rival and lying about it ethical just because the victim opposes Batman, or is killing always objectionable no matter the reason? Batman clearly operates, unlike his fellow superheroes, in the “gray area,” oftentimes between wrong and right. There are costs, human and otherwise, to his decisions. In this unit, we will delve into the employer-employee relationship in a new way, regarding affirmative action and at-will employment to start. We will learn about and address the nuances of affirmative action: preferring one qualified group over another in hiring and promotions. Many argue that affirmative action exists in the “gray area,” as well. Giving preferential treatment to some based on certain characteristics to the detriment of others who are qualified. Those passed over, because they are non-minorities, risk unemployment and worse. Are we “robbing Peter to pay Paul,” as Batman does? Or, instead, is it a necessary evil to right the injustices of the past? If so, is it the correct vehicle to right those wrongs? However important the reason for affirmative action, we must admit that there are costs and externalities associated with the well-intended plan. Is it ethical to prefer one group over another on this basis? Is affirmative action akin to doing whatever it takes, no matter the cost (human, ethical, or financial) to reach the intended result? On the issue of costs imposed for a larger, benevolent reason, we will study the Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) regulations—its purposes, regulations, and costs. OSHA regulates the working environment of millions of employees in the United States. It mandates a safe workplace, safe from chemicals and workplace hostilities, for example. OSHA requirements clearly increase the cost of doing business for companies. But is it fair, and is it ethical? Who benefits and who loses? Why? Who should decide in this netherworld between black and white regulations? When business costs increase, on the margin, some companies must go out of business, and this also has a cost on society, including but not limited to higher unemployment. Some people are out of work and cannot pay their bills. Are we thus protecting one group at the cost of another? It has been found that the offsetting costs of preventing injuries to employees are astronomical, for example. People’s lives and livelihoods are saved because of these regulations. If it were not for OSHA protections, not only would the costs be extremely large by comparison, but they would be considered “externalities” of the system, which is to say that the costs caused by companies would be borne

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by others: employees, hospitals who provide free/indigent care, insurance companies, etc. OSHA regulations better insure that the costs created by businesses are paid by them. At first glance one might think that OSHA safety regulations would cost businesses millions in safety upgrades. Instead, every year workplace injuries, illnesses, and deaths cost our nation $170 billion. According to studies, a good safety and health program can save $4 to $6 for every $1 invested under the regulations (OSHA, n.d., para. 2). A 1996 study by the Center for the Study of American Business at Washington University in St. Louis analyzed 25 major rules issued by the Occupational Safety and Health Administration since 1980 and found (Mukherjee, 1996):

 Every manufacturing firm pays an average of $9,000 and $36,000 yearly to comply with OSHA rules on air quality and process safety, respectively.

 OSHA's strict hazardous-waste operation regulations are costing construction firms across the nation more than $700,000 yearly.

 OSHA rules on labeling and classifying materials cost businesses the most. Clearly, OSHA positively impacts the employees who benefit from the increased safety, but those who are out of work due to companies’ inabilities to comply with OSHA pay a huge cost. Is it ethical for them to shoulder that cost, especially when it is their very livelihood? Lastly, in this unit, we will study products liability law and the responsibilities it imposes upon businesses, as well as the Liebeck v. McDonald’s Restaurant case. This is the infamous “hot coffee” case involving a plaintiff with third-degree burns due to McDonald’s decision to serve its coffee at up to 190 degrees, all after 700 other complaints that the coffee was too hot, and paying over a half of a million dollars in compensation. Was McDonald’s decision to knowingly serve coffee at a temperature which would produce third degree burns in less than 10 seconds justified, so that commuters could still have hot coffee after their long commute to work? Or, was something else at work here? In general, product liability refers to the obligations of manufacturers and sellers to consumers, users, and even bystanders when a product is found to be defective. We will study what it means for a product to be defective based on contract and tort law as well as the theories of defectiveness, such as a manufacturing, design, or marketing defect. In the case of a manufacturing defect, for example, is the producer liable if a customer breaks his tooth on a cherry pit, which was not removed from the cherry pie he bought and consumed? Would it be different if it was a rock of the same size of a cherry pit? When it comes to a design and marketing defect, is the victim entitled to relief if she is injured when a bottle rocket firework prematurely explodes in her hand after two seconds when it usually explodes after 10? When the law balances the interests of consumers against a company’s opportunity to manufacture and market a product, who should prevail and on what basis? Are there ethical considerations? If so, what are they? We will explore these and other issues as we study the employer-employee relationship more deeply, and in the context of business regulation of products in this unit.

References Mukherjee, Sougata. (1996, November 3). OSHA’s cost to business: $33 billion. Denver Business Journal.

Retrieved from http://www.bizjournals.com/denver/stories/1996/11/04/story4.html?page=all Occupational Safety and Health Administration. (n.d.). Safety pays. Retrieved from

https://www.osha.gov/Region7/fallprotection/safetypays.html