02
Sat, Nov
2 New Articles

Out of the Blue: Corporate Ethics in the New Millennium

Commentary
Typography
  • Smaller Small Medium Big Bigger
  • Default Helvetica Segoe Georgia Times

Corporate Ethics in the New Millennium

Why the subject of corporate ethics invariably induces a hardy yawn in the general population is hard to fathom. After all, the absence of ethics is a habitual precursor to fraudulent or injurious acts that subvert the democratic process, deprive Americans of their cash, and threaten their health or sometimes even their lives. Perhaps reactions are so muted not because the evidence of decay is invisible but because it is discernible everywhere.

Despite the level of public resignation, there is, as psychologist Nathaniel Branden cautions, no such thing as a small breach of integrity. Over time, modest fissures in ethical business conduct create an atmosphere of tolerance that invites tectonic shifts.

Consider IBM, involved in litigation in which the computer maker is accused of unsafe chemical exposures in its clean room operations. The situation, though troubling, is comparatively benign next to the executives from Du Pont, Monsanto, and Hercules who, as reported in the Multinational Monitor, negotiated as part of the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT) a standard that allowed DDT residue on imported produce to be 33 to 50 times higher than U.S. law permits. Never mind that DDT is so toxic it is not even produced for domestic use. Yet, even that pales in consequence when compared to the actions of the European biotechnology companies that, according to author Richard Preston, equipped Iraq with the means to develop a biological weapons program.

For better or worse, corporations have become the dominant institutions on the planet, defining the economic, cultural, and political agendas for human beings and all other living things. Their pursuit of wealth and power has become a global obsession. With privilege, however, comes responsibility, which corporations shun as uncompetitive. Still, the commanding element in any system has an obligation to the whole; and, while corporations have fought to secure the maximum freedom to do as they choose, they accept minimal accountability for the consequences of their pursuits, which frequently sacrifice principle to competitive advantage.

Since we now fully depend on corporations for almost everything from jobs to entertainment, what can employees and managers do in their own modest enterprises when

they find themselves competing in an ethical sewer? The dilemma leads many to ask: “Why should I be honest when Gerber lies to babies about the content of its products and tobacco industry executives swear before God to tell the truth to Congress and their oath means nothing?”

The challenge is not an easy one. It is a heroic and sometimes lonely endeavor built on dozens of daily decisions. It starts with the personal commitment to high ethical standards that each individual brings to the workplace. It’s small things like taking a vacation day rather than a sick day if one is not sick, or buying office supplies for home use rather than taking them. It is one person saying “no” in the face of the collective “yes.” It is the realization that the character of a company is more valuable than any short-term rewards for its betrayal. It is speaking the truth unadorned by public relations, spin doctors, lobbyists, “cigarette scientists,” and greenwashing.

In the absence of ethics, image must supplant unpleasant realities; thus, manipulation of the truth, the media, the government, and, above all, public opinion has become a corporate survival strategy. IBM, like its corporate cousins, has legions of public relations specialists who could paint a happy face on the Antichrist and a cadre of lawyer/lobbyists who toil to procure government favor. There are encouraging signs, however, that the flagship of American enterprise is not resorting to the practice of greenwashing. In what might have been simply a public relations ploy, IBM Chairman and CEO Louis Gerstner declared: “The world’s environmental problems are too real and immediate—as well as long-term in their implications—for anything but total commitment on the part of those who have the capacity to do something about them.”

Gerstner’s statement was no ploy. The “something” turned out to be a substantive commitment of intellectual and financial capital—over $1 billion—to clean up and prevent environmental pollution.

True to the chairman’s word, by 1994, the company had reduced its releases of industrial chemicals reported under the U.S. Toxic Release Inventory requirements by 81 percent from 1987 levels. In Rochester, IBM recycles more than 70 percent of the waste generated from the development and manufacture of the AS/400. Rochester is among the first manufacturing facilities in the nation to assume full life-cycle responsibility for its product by establishing a center that accepts obsolete AS/400s. A full 98 percent of the recovered parts are either reconditioned and used as new, used by field personnel as replacement parts, or recycled.

Even with all its progress, the company still contributes millions of tons of waste to the 11.4 billion tons of hazardous effluent that corporations annually confer on the planet. Economists expediently call it an “externalized cost,” and it is this ability—the practice of transferring the costs and consequences of production to the public—that lies at the heart of many ethical transgressions.

The remedy, first voiced by Clifford Cobb, Ted Halstead, and Jonathan Rowe in an October 1995 Atlantic Monthly article, requires a change in the way we assess economic transactions.

Currently, the nation’s economic measuring system, the gross domestic product (GDP), adds but does not subtract. Any action that generates income, regardless of how damaging to the planet or its people, is counted as economically beneficial. Thus, an oil spill, overfishing of the oceans, the spraying of toxic chemicals on the food supply, the cutting of the last ancient forests, child labor, and even earthquakes or hurricanes are all viewed as good for the economy. But they are not necessarily good for people. For instance, the profit that a company can make from depleting a fishery today is poorly earned if it means people go hungry tomorrow.

When disaster is portrayed as gain, values are inverted: A safe food supply becomes less valuable than the earnings of Dow Chemical. The authors argue that, if we understood the full cost of economic activity, we would likely reject those that serve us poorly. Economics would become a means to an end, not an end in itself. A more useful

valuation would be an NDP—a net domestic product that would support ethical behavior by exposing the costs of harmful pursuits.

Such a change in the economic barometer will require a shift in the national consciousness, but what can one person do? A friend of mine who manages an IT consulting firm in Oregon told me he once turned down a major contract with a logging company because he objected to their practice of clearcutting thousands of acres of forest. A colleague in New Jersey refused to create a Web site for a customer when he discovered that the “dating service” trafficked in pornography. A manufacturing company in southern Oregon (see next month’s “Out of the Blue”) adopted as two of its corporate values “honesty and integrity.” The company has only one work rule for its employees: Live our values.

The history of corporate antisocial behavior dates back to the aftermath of the Civil War. Prior to that, corporations were chartered only for a limited time and a specific purpose—building a canal, for example. Corporate officers were fully liable for the actions of the corporation and could be prosecuted. When the project was finished, the charter was revoked, and the corporation disbanded. But the Civil War was fought largely on borrowed money; after the war, lending banks and corporations held positions of enormous influence and pushed to acquire the rights of a supercitizen.

In 1886, the Supreme Court declared in Santa Clara County v Southern Pacific Railroad that a private corporation was a natural person under the U.S. Constitution. With personhood came unprecedented capacities: unlimited life, unlimited size, unlimited power, and unlimited license. The differences between individual rights and corporate rights are striking. An individual, for example, cannot take a gun, fire into a crowd of 100,000, and kill ten people without consequence. A corporation can. According to the provisions of the Clean Water Act, oil, chemical, and steel companies are not liable for the deaths of up to 10 people per 100,000 in neighborhoods around their plants and refineries.

Revoking corporate personhood would restore accountability. Under the current system, not one Union Carbide executive served a single day in jail for killing 2,000 people and blinding thousands more in Bhopal, or for injuring 141 people in a toxic release in West Virginia just eight months later.

Rescinding personhood would also restore our most basic democratic values by delinking money from free speech. Corporations have virtually no limits on political spending and advertising and so can dominate political discourse. And when General Electric, Westinghouse, and Disney own the three major networks, the possibility of meaningful debate is even further limited: GE is unlikely to air a special on its 47 Superfund sites or its history of overcharging the government in military procurement scams. With $80 billion in annual revenues, IBM commands an overwhelming voice in the political arena. Should it have a collective voice greater than that of its individual employees?

If corporate ethics are to be restored, time is of the essence because new international trade agreements seek to raise the status of corporations to that of governments. Once corporations are allowed to escape the bonds of national loyalty to become truly stateless, to whom will they be accountable?

Today, corporate size and dominion exponentially multiply the impact of an ethical breach. Prevarication and manipulation now have the potential to do global damage and retard necessary changes in our collective behavior. Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist Ross Gelbstan documents that the gas and oil industry orchestrated a deliberate misinformation campaign designed—according to industry documents—to “reposition global warming from fact to theory,” and aimed its campaign at the poor and less educated.

The urgency for ethical reform can also be felt in the growing concentration of corporate power. Of the world’s 100 largest economies, 51 are corporations. (As of 1995, according to the Institute of Policy Studies, IBM was number 52 and GE number 55.)

If reform is to occur, it will start with the individual. Corporate ethics, after all, are essentially bundled individual ethics. By bringing awareness and accountability to business

transactions; adopting a clear vision that reveres principle above profit; calculating the full cost of production; eliminating waste; refusing to profit from the misery of others; speaking the truth; supporting other businesses that share like values—in the conduct of our business lives, in making decisions large and small, we have an opportunity to transform the way business is conducted and, in the process, discover who we are.

In 1864, at the close of the Civil War, Abraham Lincoln wrote a letter to Colonel William F. Elkins of the Union Army. “I see in the near future a crisis approaching that unnerves me and causes me to tremble for the safety of my country. As a result of the war, corporations have been enthroned and an era of corruption in high places will follow, and the money power of the country will endeavor to prolong its reign until all wealth is aggregated in a few hands and the Republic is destroyed. I feel at this moment more anxiety for the safety of my country than ever before, even in the midst of war.”

It is my hope there is still time to prove Lincoln’s anxiety was misplaced.

BLOG COMMENTS POWERED BY DISQUS

LATEST COMMENTS

Support MC Press Online

$

Book Reviews

Resource Center

  • SB Profound WC 5536 Have you been wondering about Node.js? Our free Node.js Webinar Series takes you from total beginner to creating a fully-functional IBM i Node.js business application. You can find Part 1 here. In Part 2 of our free Node.js Webinar Series, Brian May teaches you the different tooling options available for writing code, debugging, and using Git for version control. Brian will briefly discuss the different tools available, and demonstrate his preferred setup for Node development on IBM i or any platform. Attend this webinar to learn:

  • SB Profound WP 5539More than ever, there is a demand for IT to deliver innovation. Your IBM i has been an essential part of your business operations for years. However, your organization may struggle to maintain the current system and implement new projects. The thousands of customers we've worked with and surveyed state that expectations regarding the digital footprint and vision of the company are not aligned with the current IT environment.

  • SB HelpSystems ROBOT Generic IBM announced the E1080 servers using the latest Power10 processor in September 2021. The most powerful processor from IBM to date, Power10 is designed to handle the demands of doing business in today’s high-tech atmosphere, including running cloud applications, supporting big data, and managing AI workloads. But what does Power10 mean for your data center? In this recorded webinar, IBMers Dan Sundt and Dylan Boday join IBM Power Champion Tom Huntington for a discussion on why Power10 technology is the right strategic investment if you run IBM i, AIX, or Linux. In this action-packed hour, Tom will share trends from the IBM i and AIX user communities while Dan and Dylan dive into the tech specs for key hardware, including:

  • Magic MarkTRY the one package that solves all your document design and printing challenges on all your platforms. Produce bar code labels, electronic forms, ad hoc reports, and RFID tags – without programming! MarkMagic is the only document design and print solution that combines report writing, WYSIWYG label and forms design, and conditional printing in one integrated product. Make sure your data survives when catastrophe hits. Request your trial now!  Request Now.

  • SB HelpSystems ROBOT GenericForms of ransomware has been around for over 30 years, and with more and more organizations suffering attacks each year, it continues to endure. What has made ransomware such a durable threat and what is the best way to combat it? In order to prevent ransomware, organizations must first understand how it works.

  • SB HelpSystems ROBOT GenericIT security is a top priority for businesses around the world, but most IBM i pros don’t know where to begin—and most cybersecurity experts don’t know IBM i. In this session, Robin Tatam explores the business impact of lax IBM i security, the top vulnerabilities putting IBM i at risk, and the steps you can take to protect your organization. If you’re looking to avoid unexpected downtime or corrupted data, you don’t want to miss this session.

  • SB HelpSystems ROBOT GenericCan you trust all of your users all of the time? A typical end user receives 16 malicious emails each month, but only 17 percent of these phishing campaigns are reported to IT. Once an attack is underway, most organizations won’t discover the breach until six months later. A staggering amount of damage can occur in that time. Despite these risks, 93 percent of organizations are leaving their IBM i systems vulnerable to cybercrime. In this on-demand webinar, IBM i security experts Robin Tatam and Sandi Moore will reveal:

  • FORTRA Disaster protection is vital to every business. Yet, it often consists of patched together procedures that are prone to error. From automatic backups to data encryption to media management, Robot automates the routine (yet often complex) tasks of iSeries backup and recovery, saving you time and money and making the process safer and more reliable. Automate your backups with the Robot Backup and Recovery Solution. Key features include:

  • FORTRAManaging messages on your IBM i can be more than a full-time job if you have to do it manually. Messages need a response and resources must be monitored—often over multiple systems and across platforms. How can you be sure you won’t miss important system events? Automate your message center with the Robot Message Management Solution. Key features include:

  • FORTRAThe thought of printing, distributing, and storing iSeries reports manually may reduce you to tears. Paper and labor costs associated with report generation can spiral out of control. Mountains of paper threaten to swamp your files. Robot automates report bursting, distribution, bundling, and archiving, and offers secure, selective online report viewing. Manage your reports with the Robot Report Management Solution. Key features include:

  • FORTRAFor over 30 years, Robot has been a leader in systems management for IBM i. With batch job creation and scheduling at its core, the Robot Job Scheduling Solution reduces the opportunity for human error and helps you maintain service levels, automating even the biggest, most complex runbooks. Manage your job schedule with the Robot Job Scheduling Solution. Key features include:

  • LANSA Business users want new applications now. Market and regulatory pressures require faster application updates and delivery into production. Your IBM i developers may be approaching retirement, and you see no sure way to fill their positions with experienced developers. In addition, you may be caught between maintaining your existing applications and the uncertainty of moving to something new.

  • LANSAWhen it comes to creating your business applications, there are hundreds of coding platforms and programming languages to choose from. These options range from very complex traditional programming languages to Low-Code platforms where sometimes no traditional coding experience is needed. Download our whitepaper, The Power of Writing Code in a Low-Code Solution, and:

  • LANSASupply Chain is becoming increasingly complex and unpredictable. From raw materials for manufacturing to food supply chains, the journey from source to production to delivery to consumers is marred with inefficiencies, manual processes, shortages, recalls, counterfeits, and scandals. In this webinar, we discuss how:

  • The MC Resource Centers bring you the widest selection of white papers, trial software, and on-demand webcasts for you to choose from. >> Review the list of White Papers, Trial Software or On-Demand Webcast at the MC Press Resource Center. >> Add the items to yru Cart and complet he checkout process and submit

  • Profound Logic Have you been wondering about Node.js? Our free Node.js Webinar Series takes you from total beginner to creating a fully-functional IBM i Node.js business application.

  • SB Profound WC 5536Join us for this hour-long webcast that will explore:

  • Fortra IT managers hoping to find new IBM i talent are discovering that the pool of experienced RPG programmers and operators or administrators with intimate knowledge of the operating system and the applications that run on it is small. This begs the question: How will you manage the platform that supports such a big part of your business? This guide offers strategies and software suggestions to help you plan IT staffing and resources and smooth the transition after your AS/400 talent retires. Read on to learn: