Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Table of cases
- Table of statutes
- Preface
- PART ONE CORPORATE GOVERNANCE: AN OVERVIEW
- PART TWO CORPORATE GOVERNANCE IN AUSTRALIA
- PART THREE CORPORATE GOVERNANCE IN PRACTICE
- PART FOUR CORPORATE GOVERNANCE: AN INTERNATIONAL PERSPECTIVE
- PART FIVE CORPORATE GOVERNANCE: GOING FORWARD
- 13 The case for enhanced shareholder participation in corporate decision-making
- 14 The ethical obligations of corporations
- 15 Reflections on contemporary corporate governance and its future direction
- Index
14 - The ethical obligations of corporations
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Table of cases
- Table of statutes
- Preface
- PART ONE CORPORATE GOVERNANCE: AN OVERVIEW
- PART TWO CORPORATE GOVERNANCE IN AUSTRALIA
- PART THREE CORPORATE GOVERNANCE IN PRACTICE
- PART FOUR CORPORATE GOVERNANCE: AN INTERNATIONAL PERSPECTIVE
- PART FIVE CORPORATE GOVERNANCE: GOING FORWARD
- 13 The case for enhanced shareholder participation in corporate decision-making
- 14 The ethical obligations of corporations
- 15 Reflections on contemporary corporate governance and its future direction
- Index
Summary
The social responsibility of business is to increase profits.
Milton Friedman, The New York Times, 13 September 1970.Ethics deals with values, with good and bad, with right and wrong. We cannot avoid involvement in ethics for what we do – and what we don't do – is always a possible subject of ethical evaluation. Anyone who thinks about what he or she ought to do is, consciously or unconsciously, involved in ethics.
Peter Singer, A Companion to Ethics, Oxford, Blackwell (1991), v.Introduction
So far this book has focused on the legal rights and duties of those involved in the governance of companies. This chapter examines not what the law stipulates is expected of those involved in corporate governance, but the ethical responsibilities of company officers. These levels of inquiry, though often overlapping, are quite different. The ultimate aim of the law is to guide and coordinate human behaviour, normally through the threat of coercive measures for violations of legal norms. In order to be effective at shaping human conduct, legal norms must be clear and knowable.
Morality is less prescriptive than the law – there is no official sanction or censure involved with breach of moral norms. It is also generally more open-ended and less clear. This, however, should not stifle the search for moral truths or consensual moral norms.
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- Principles of Contemporary Corporate Governance , pp. 343 - 362Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2005
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