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The business of ethics and the ethics of business

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Abstract

This is an essay in personal business ethics of executives as distinguished from the institutional ethics of corporations. Its purpose is to give practical moral guidance to executives for the conduct of their lives both as corporate decision-makers and as human beings. The pivotal concept in this model of personal business ethics is a direct appeal to the self-interest of executives in their being moral.

Our thesis is that generally there is a twofold return on investment in ethics (ROIE) for executives. The first one is related to employee output: by becoming a self-actualizing moral type, executives indicate commitment to excellence. Accordingly, they so manage employees that the latter can also live up to their full potential and excell. And that would increase corporate productivity and product or service quality. The second payback of morality is personal: fully developed, self-actualized managers are generally happier people than those whose growth has been arrested. In brief, moral self-actualization is the same as commitment to excellence and there is a payback in being the best. Return on investment in ethics and return on investment in excellence can both be abbreviated as ROIE.

We accomplish the purpose and establish the thesis of this essay by seeking answers to the following questions: What business does ethics have in business? What business does business have in ethics? Is there a return on investment in ethics for executives? and Does being moral help executives become more effective managers?

In sketching answers to these questions, we first show why executives need a personal business ethics especially in today's world. Then, we sketch the nature of ethics and of business. After these introductory materials, the body of the paper argues for a personal business ethics for executives by correlating elements of management theory with ethics. Specifically, it links a theory of employee motivation with a scale of values, management character types with moral types, and management leadership styles with morality. Then, the practical technique of life by objectives (LBO) is explained. It can help executives manage their lives more effectively in both the business and ethical sense. We conclude by explaining ideals of excellence which can guide executives in their work and development both as managers and as human beings.

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Dr. John E. Pattan is Manager, Training and Development, at the Brown and Williamson Tobacco Corporation. He was formerly Manager, Training and Development, at MARTA, and Chairman at the Department of Philosophy, Josephinum College. He was National Defense Education Act Fellow for the Ph. D. His most important publications are: ‘General Justice and Justice in General in Aristotle’, in John K. Ryan (ed.), Ancients and Moderns (Catholic University of America Press, Washington D.C., 1970); ‘Morally Indifferent Acts?’, Idealistic Studies (1972); ‘Epikeia in Aristotle’, The Modern Schoolman (1974); ‘Return on Investment: Transferring the Results of Management Training to On-the-Job Performance’, Personnel (1983).

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Pattan, J.E. The business of ethics and the ethics of business. J Bus Ethics 3, 1–19 (1984). https://doi.org/10.1007/BF00381707

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  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/BF00381707

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