Hostname: page-component-cd9895bd7-lnqnp Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-12-26T02:10:06.654Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Ethical Behavior as a Strategic Choice by Large Corporations: The Interactive Effect of Marketplace Competition, Industry Structure and Firm Resources

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  23 January 2015

Abstract:

Analysis of ethical conduct of business organizations has hitherto placed primary emphasis on the conduct of that corporation’s managers because ethical conduct, like all conduct, must manifest itself through individual behavior. This paper argues that in the real world corporate actions are influenced, to a considerable extent, by external market-based conditions. Therefore, a more comprehensive explanation of ethical business conduct must incorporate both corporate, i.e., internal considerations, and competitive, industry structure-based, i.e., external considerations. A framework is presented that provides a systematic analysis of the interactive effect between different types of external market-based competitive conditions, institutional opportunities to engage in ethical behavior, and the likelihood that corporations would do so. The analytical framework leads to recommendations as to the types of actions that might be more effective in improving business ethical conduct under varying sets of market-based competitive conditions.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Society for Business Ethics 1998

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Ansoff, I., and McDonnell, E. 1990. Implanting strategic management. 2nd ed. New York: Prentice-Hall.Google Scholar
Baumol, W. J. 1991. Perfect markets and easy virtue: Business ethics and the invisible hand. Cambridge, MA: Blackwell.Google Scholar
Baucus, M. S., and Near, J. P. 1991. Can illegal corporate behavior be predicted? An event history analysis. Academy of Management Journal, 34(1): 936.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Beaver, W. 1995. Levi’s is leaving China. Business Horizons, 38(2): 3540.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Beliveau, B., Cottrill, M., and O’Neill, H. M. 1994. Predicting corporate social responsiveness: A model drawn from three perspectives. Journal of Business Ethics, 13: 731738.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Berkowitz, J. B., and Helsing, L. D. 1987. Pollution: Watch on the Rhine. National Underwriter, (October 12): 9, 2021.Google Scholar
Binstein, M., and Bowden, C. 1993. Trust me: Charles Keating and the missing billions. New York: Random House.Google Scholar
Bishop, J. D. 1995. Adam Smith’s invisible hand argument. Journal of Business Ethics, 14: 165180.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Black, R. 1994. John Commons on customer goodwill and the economic value of business ethics: Response to Professor Sen. Business Ethics Quarterly, 4(3): 359365.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bucy, P. H. 1991. Corporate ethos: A standard for imposing corporate criminal liability. Minnesota Law Review, 75(4): 10951184.Google Scholar
Burrough, B., and Helyar, J. 1990. Barbarians at the gate: The fall of RJR Nabisco. New York: Harper & Row.Google Scholar
Carlin, P. 1995. Will rapid growth stunt corporate do-gooders? Business and Society Review, 93(Spring): 3643.Google Scholar
Clinard, M. B., Yeager, P. C., Brissette, J., Petrashek, D., and Harries, E. 1979. Illegal corporate behavior. Washington, DC: U.S. Department of Justice, National Institute of Law Enforcement and Criminal Justice.Google Scholar
Cochran, P. L., and Nigh, D. 1987. Illegal corporate behavior and the question of moral agency: An empirical examination. In Frederick, W. C. (ed.), Research in corporate social performance and policy, Vol. 9: 7391. Greenwich, CT: JAI Press.Google Scholar
Coffee, J. C. Jr. 1981. No soul to damn: No body to kick: An unscandalized inquiry into the problem of corporate punishment. Michigan Law Review, 389459.Google Scholar
Cohen, M. A. 1991. Corporate crime and punishment: An update on sentencing practice in the federal courts, 1988–1990. Boston University Law Review, 71: 247280.Google Scholar
Cohen, M. A. 1992. Sentencing guidelines and corporate criminal liability in the United States. Business and the Contemporary World, 4(3)Summer: 140157.Google Scholar
Cook, F. J. 1966. The corrupted land: The social morality of modern America. New York: The Macmillan Company.Google Scholar
Darnton, J. 1994. It’s your money or strife in Zaire, where corruption reigns. New York Times, June 7: A12.Google Scholar
Day, K. 1993. S&L hell: The people and the politics behind the $1 trillion savings and loan scandal. New York: Norton.Google Scholar
De George, R. T. 1991. Will success spoil business ethics? In Freeman, R. E. (ed.), Business ethics: The state of the art, New York: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
De George, R. T. 1993. Competing with integrity in international business. New York: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
De George, R. T. 1994. International business ethics and incipient capitalism: A double standard? Paper presented at the University of Notre Dame Conference on Corporate Social Responsibility in a Global Economy: The Challenge. April 1113.Google Scholar
Donaldson, T. 1989. The ethics of international business. New York: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Donaldson, T. 1991. Rights in the global market. In Freeman, R.E. (ed.), Business ethics, (pp. 139162). New York: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Donaldson, T. and Werhane, P. H. 1996. Ethical issues in business: A philosophical approach. 5th ed. Upper Saddle River, NJ: Prentice-Hall.Google Scholar
Dudek, D. J., Leblanc, A. M., and Sewall, K. 1990. Business responses to environmental policy: Lessons from CFC regulation. In Michael, W.Hoffman, R. Frederick and Petry, E. S. Jr. (eds.), Business, ethics and the environment: The public policy debate, (pp. 3560). New York: Quorum Books.Google Scholar
Ferrell, O. C., and Gresham, L. G. 1985. A contingency framework of understanding ethical decision making in marketing. Journal of Marketing, 49(Summer): 8796.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Fisse, B. 1983. Reconstructing corporate criminal law: Deterrence, retribution, fault, and sanctions. Southern California Law Review, 56: 11411246.Google Scholar
Forbrum, C., and Shanley, M. 1990. What’s in a name? Reputation building and corporate strategy. Academy of Management Journal, 33: 233258.Google Scholar
Friedman, M. 1971. Does business have a social responsibility? Bank Administration, April.Google Scholar
Fuller, J. G. 1962. The gentlemen conspirators: The story of the price-fixers in the electrical industry. New York: Grove Press.Google Scholar
Grant, R. M. 1995. Contemporary strategy analysis: Concepts, techniques, applications. 2nd ed. Cambridge, MA: Basil Blackwell.Google Scholar
Harris, R. G., and Carman, J. M. 1991. The political economy of regulation: An analysis of market failures. In Sethi, S. P., Steidlmeier, P., and Falbe, C. M. (eds.), Scaling the corporate wall, (pp. 2435). Englewood Cliffs, NJ: Prentice-Hall.Google Scholar
Harvard Law Review, 1979. Developments in the law corporate crime: Regulating corporate behavior through criminal sanctions. 92(6): 12271375.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hayek, F. A. 1944. The road to serfdom. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.Google Scholar
Herling, J. 1962. The great price conspiracy: The story of the antitrust violations in the electrical industry. Washington: Robert B. Luce, Inc.Google Scholar
Hoagland, J. 1995. Shell’s game in Nigeria. Washington Post, November 5: C7.Google Scholar
Hoffman, W. M., Frederick, R. and Petry, E. S. Jr. (eds.). 1990a. Business, ethics and the environment: The public policy debate. New York: Quorum Books.Google Scholar
Hoffman, W. M., Frederick, R. and Petry, E. S. Jr. 1990b. The corporation, ethics, and the environment. New York: Quorum Books.Google Scholar
Holcomb, J., and Sethi, S. P. 1992. Corporate and executive criminal liability: Appropriate standards, remedies, and managerial responses. Business and the Contemporary World, 4(3)Summer: 81105.Google Scholar
Hoon, S. and Sherry, A. 1995. Cutting the knot. Far Eastern Economic Review, November 30: 6670.Google Scholar
Huddle, N., Reich, M., and Stiskin, N. 1975. Island of dreams: Environmental crisis in Japan, New York: Autumn Press.Google Scholar
Kamata, S. 1982. Japan in a passing lane: An insider’s account of life in a Japanese auto factory, New York: Pantheon.Google Scholar
Kennedy, C. 1985. Criminal sentences for corporations: Alternative fining mechanisms. California Law Review, 73: 448482.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lewis, M. 1989. Liar’s poker: Rising through the wreckage on Wall Street. New York: Norton.Google Scholar
Lorsch, J. W., with Maclver, E. 1989. Pawns or potentates: The reality of America’s corporate boards. Boston, MA: Harvard Business School Press.Google Scholar
Maitland, I. 1995. Virtuous markets: The market as school of the virtues. Paper presented at the Annual Meeting of the Society for Business Ethics, Vancouver, B.C., Canada, August 36.Google Scholar
McClenahen, J. S. 1995. Good enough. Industry Week, 244(4): 5862.Google Scholar
Michelman, J. H. 1983. Some ethical consequences of economic competition. Journal of Business Ethics, 2: 7987.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Moore, M. 1994. The second disaster in Bhopal. Business and Society Review, 88(Winter): 2628.Google Scholar
Powell, D. 1990. The development and implementation of industry-wide environmental codes of practice. In Michael, W.Hoffman, R. Frederick, and Petry, E. S. Jr. (eds.), The corporation, ethics, and the environment, (pp. 163171). New York: Quorum Books.Google Scholar
Richburg, K. B. 1994. An African giant falls under its own weight. Washington Post, July 10: A1.Google Scholar
Sapsford, J., and Shirouzu, N. 1995. Scandal-ridden executives in Japan may lose face, but not their shirts. Wall Street Journal, October 19: A19.Google Scholar
Sen, A. 1992. Inequality examined, Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.Google Scholar
Sen, A. 1993a. Does business ethics make economic sense? Business Ethics Quarterly, 3(1): 4554.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Sen, A. 1993b. Money and value: On the ethics and economics of finance. Economics and Philosophy, 9:203227.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Sethi, S. P. 1978. Liability without fault? The corporate executive as an unwitting criminal. Employee Relations Law Journal, 4(2): 185219.Google Scholar
Sethi, S. P. 1979. A Conceptual framework for environmental analysis of social issues and evaluation of business response patterns. Academy of Management Review, January 1979: 6374.Google Scholar
Sethi, S. P. 1987. Corporate law violations and white-collar crime: The expanding scope of executive liability (criminal and civil) for corporate law violations. In Prakash, S. Sethi and Falbe, C. M. (eds.), Business and society: Dimensions of conflict and cooperation, (pp. 471506). Lexington, MA: Lexington Books.Google Scholar
Sethi, S. P. 1994a. Imperfect markets: Business ethics as an easy virtue. Journal of Business Ethics, 13(10): 803815.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Sethi, S. P. 1994b. Multinational corporations and the impact of public advocacy on corporate strategy: Nestle and the infant formula controversy. Boston: Kluwer Academic Publishers.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Sethi, S. P. 1994c. The Notion of the “Good Corporation” in a competitive global economy—Moving from a socially responsible to a socially accountable corporation. Paper presented at a conference sponsored by the University of Notre Dame and Notre Dame Center for Ethics and Religious Values in Business. Notre Dame, IN, April 1113.Google Scholar
Sethi, S. P., and Falbe, C. M. 1987. Business and society: Dimensions of conflict and cooperation. Lexington, MA: Lexington Books/D.C. Heath and Company.Google Scholar
Shenon, P. 1994. Bank scandal may expose corrupt links in Indonesia. New York Times, May 28: A35.Google Scholar
Sjogren, E. 1987. Who will clean up Europe’s pollution? Management Today, (January): 19.Google Scholar
Smith, R. A. 1961a. The incredible electrical conspiracy, Part I. Fortune, 63(April): 132137.Google Scholar
Smith, R. A. 1961b. The incredible electrical conspiracy, Part II. Fortune, 63(May): 161164.Google Scholar
Solomon, R. C. 1992. Ethics and excellence. New York: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Staw, B. M., and Szwajkowski, E. 1975. The scarcity munificence component of organizational environments and the commission of illegal acts. Administrative Science Quarterly, 20: 345354.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Stevenson, R. W. 1994. Body Shop’s green image is attacked. New York Times, September 2: D1, 6.Google Scholar
Stewart, J. B. 1991. Den of thieves. New York: Simon & Schuster.Google Scholar
Sullivan, K. 1995. S. Korean slush fund disclosed. The Washington Post, October 28: A22.Google Scholar
Tygiel, J. 1994 The great Los Angeles swindle: Oil, stocks, and scandal during the roaring twenties. New York: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
U.S. Sentencing Commission. 1991. Supplementary report on sentencing guidelines for organizations, August 30: 1011.Google Scholar
Verespej, M. A. 1994. Masters of change. Industry Week, 243(5): 9.Google Scholar
Vise, D. A., and Coll, S. 1991. Eagle on the street, New York: Scribners.Google Scholar
Walton, C. C., and Cleveland, F. W. Jr. 1964. Corporations on trial: The electrical cases. Belmont, CA: Wadsworth.Google Scholar
Weaver, K. Mark, and Ferrell, O. C. 1977. The impact of corporate policy on reported ethical beliefs and behavior of marketing practitioners. In Greenberg, Barnett and Bellenger, D. N. (eds.), Contemporary marketing thought. Chicago: American Marketing.Google Scholar
Wogaman, J. P. 1986. Economics and ethics: A Christian enquiry, Philadelphia: Fortress Press.Google Scholar