Studyspark Study Document

Clifford and Greenhouse 2012 Outline an Ethical Research Paper

Pages:2 (692 words)

Sources:2

Subject:Crime

Topic:Bribery

Document Type:Research Paper

Document:#37196349


Clifford and Greenhouse (2012) outline an ethical situation that occurred with Wal-Mart in Mexico. The company found that its subsidiary, Wal-Mex had commonly used bribery in order to pay off public officials in order to have their stores built. In such situations, Wal-Mex was seeking to expand rapidly in Mexico, but in each location the company had to get permission from the local authorities. Local managers decided to speed the process along by paying the bribes that were requested of them. The bribes in many cases were not illegal in Mexico, but they do contravene the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act, and they also are against most ethical sensibilities in the United States, where bribery is substantially less common than in Mexico.

Ethical management involves, first and foremost, paying attention to the law and working within its confines. The situation here is a grey area in that Wal-Mex is a subsidiary, so it operates at arm's length from head office. However, ethical management also holds that bribery is unethical, because it is essentially stealing from your employers to pay or accept a bribe. Moreover, bribery is something that weights down economies, with the result being that the people of Mexico suffer from all the bribery in their country because the economic markets do not function as efficiently.

So in terms of ethical management, it is essential that the manager at Wal-Mex does the right thing and awaits the permit, even if that permit gets delayed a bit because of the bribery. To go through the legal procedure without bribery is better for the Mexican economy and the Mexican people, and it starts to change the culture that exists with some small-time government officials in Mexico of setting policy based on who gives them the most money.

To prevent this type of thing from happening again requires a couple of different steps. One of the most important steps for a company is to build an ethical culture, which allows for managers to have a higher standard of ethical principles, which in turn will reduce the likelihood of incidents…


Sample Source(s) Used

References

Clifford, S. & Greenhouse, S. (2012). Wal-Mart's U.S. expansion plans complicated by bribery scandal. New York Times. Retrieved May 4, 2014 from http://www.nytimes.com/2012/04/30/business/wal-mart-bribery-scandal-complicates-us-expansion-plans.html

ECOA. (no date) Ethical culture building: A modern business imperative. Ethics & Compliance Officer Association. Retrieved May 4, 2014 from http://www.ethics.org/files/u5/ECOA-Report-FINAL.pdf

Cite this Document

Join thousands of other students and

"spark your studies".