Abstract
A number of business ethics theorist have highlighted the potential for economics to contribute to the advancement of business ethics. In response, this article emphasizes the insights of a particular area of economics that could provide such expansion and development. Subjectivist economics may yet provide an effective analytical framework through which to investigate and evaluate business decision making, and hence the ethics of business. Integrating the concepts of uncertainty, time and imagination, subjectivist economic theory contributes to a greater appreciation of economic choice and behaviour. While such notions are often effectively omitted from modern economic analysis to aid formal representation, business ethicists could utilize such concepts more effectively than their colleagues in economic theory. Significantly, the well-known economists who have championed the insights of subjectivist economics have themselves recommended its extension to an analysis of ethics.
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We are grateful to Keith Jakee and two referees for their comments and suggestions. The shortcomings are ours. Our names are in alphabetical order.
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Schwartz, M., Spong, H. Subjectivist Economics and Ethical Business. J Bus Ethics 90, 123–136 (2009). https://doi.org/10.1007/s10551-009-0032-1
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s10551-009-0032-1