Crane and Matten: Business Ethics (3rd Edition)
Crane and Matten: Business Ethics (3rd Edition)
Crane and Matten: Business Ethics (3rd Edition)
Chapter 11
Government, Regulation, and
Business Ethics
Lecture 11
Overview
• The specific stake that governments have in corporate
activity
• The ethical issues and problems faced in business-
government relations
• The shifts in these issues and problems in context of
globalization
• Further develop the notion of corporate citizenship by
analysing the changing role of business and CSOs
• Challenges posed by sustainability to business-
government relations and show the importance of strong
governmental regulation for achieving potentially
sustainable solutions
Government as a stakeholder
Defining government, laws, and
regulations
• Government
– variety of institutions and actors at different levels that share
a common power to issue laws
• Laws
– serve as a codification into explicit rules of the social
consensus about what a society regards as right and wrong
• Regulation
– rules that are issued by governmental actors and other
delegated authorities to constrain, enable, or encourage
particular business behaviours. Regulation includes rule
definitions, laws, mechanisms, processes, sanctions, and
incentives
Government as a stakeholder of
business
Government as a
stakeholder of
business
Regulation that
Taxes, jobs, protects their
investment, etc. interests
Business Government Society
Profitable and Consent
stable economic
framework
Legitimacy of business influence
• Business can have a significant influence on the
implementation and direction of governmental
policies. It is therefore to no surprise that the issue of
‘public sector ethics’ has gained enormous
momentum (Dobel 2007). The main ethical consideration
arising from this situation is twofold
– legitimacy of business influence;
– accountability.
• Is power and political influence of business leaders a
threat to democracy?
• To what degree is it legitimate for business to have
an influence in politics?
Accountability to the public
• One may contend that since the government acts as
a representative of society’s interests, the public has
a right to be informed about governmental decisions
with other constituencies (such as business), and be
able to determine whether it is acting in its interests
or not
• Although both parties are able to influence each
other, the main concerns for business ethics are
where business has influence on government
Modes of business influence
on government
• Numerous ways that business can influence
government
• Oberman (cited in Getz 1997:59) distinguishes among
different ways, using following criteria:
– Avenue of approach to decision-maker
• Direct
• indirect
– Breadth of transmission
• Public
• private
– Content of communication
• Information orientated
• Pressure orientated
Business influence on government
Lobbying
• Lobbying represents a direct, usually private attempt
by business actors to influence governmental decision-
making through information provision and persuasion.
– It is considered a weak form of influence (McGrath 2005)
• Different types of lobbying:
– Atmosphere setting
– Monitoring
– Provision of information to policy-makers
– Advocacy and influencing
– Application of pressure
Party financing and individual
conflicts of interest
• Donations to parties by business can raise conflict of
interest problems
• Prospect of preferential treatment
• The situation is a dilemma: having good relations with
political parties seems necessary, but party financing
has dangers
– It gains influence
– but it could severely harm the company’s image and perhaps
encourage questionable behaviour on the part of employees
• Overlap of posts between business and government
– ‘Revolving doors’ common globally (e.g., US, Europe, Japan)
– This raises substantial conflicts of interest
Corruption of governmental actors by
business
• Corruption is the abuse of entrusted power for private
gain (Transparency International)
– Main issue of government corruption in relation to business
is activities where private firms shape the formulation,
implementation, or enforcement of public policies or rules by
payments to public officials and politicians
• State capture is a situation where private firms shape
the formulation of regulation by payments to public
officials and politicians
– Where state capture becomes a ‘universal law’ (Kant), a
normally functioning economy becomes nearly impossible
2008 Corruption Perception Index for
selected countries
Note: Score relates to perceptions of the degree
of corruption among government officials as
seen by business people and risk analysts, and
ranges between 10 (highly clean) and 0 (highly
corrupt)