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Global CEO Magazine:
Business ethics-An overview of stakeholder responsibilities
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This article tries to capture the broad impact that ethics has on business and how it can be incorporated in the policy guidelines of different stakeholder organizations to ensure more transparent and profitable operations. Business ethics has been an area of growing concern across the world in the last decade. While considerable thought has gone into the effective management of business and ensuring its steady growth across industries and economies, the role of ethics or moral obligations till recently was more of a theoretical exercise in the academic circles. Corporate involvement in social obligations remained largely limited to allocate a part of the annual budget for philanthropic work

. However, recent allegations of fraudulent practices, misappropriation of funds and willful suppression of facts against some of the major transnationals in the world have made it necessary to understand the fundamental role of business ethics. This article tries to capture the broad impact ethics on business and how they can be incorporated in the policy guidelines of different stakeholder organizations to ensure more transparent and profitable operations.

Business ethics can be described as business behavior based on standards of right or wrong rather than entirely on principles of accounting and management (Hartman 1998). We can say it encompasses practices and policies in business to determine what is ethically right and wrong. What is ethically right and wrong in a given business situation depends on individual and corporate value system and the choice made thereof. The cultural, organizational and industrial environment along with personal experiences determines this choice. Due to its fundamental qualitative nature, business ethics means different things to different people.Thus, though there is a general agreement on the need of ethical standards in business, a consensus on specific standards is difficult to achieve. This difficulty arises from the fact that standards of ethics are influenced by industry, geography, economy, religion and last but not the least by time.

 
 
 

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