2. Module 2
2. Module 2
Whistle Blowing.
Categories of Managerial Morality
1. Moral management
2. Amoral management
3. Immoral management
1. Moral management
Managers aim to maximize profits within the confines of ethical values and principles. They conform to
professional and legal standards of conduct.
This type of management ethics lies between moral and immoral management ethics.
Managers respond to personal and legal ethics only if they are required to do so;
Examples -
Examples -
Ethical Norms Decisions and actions Beliefs that decision and Decisions and actions are
conforms to legal , actions lie outside moral in opposition to ethical
professional and social and lacks ethical problems
norms awareness
Goals Personal Profit as per law Personal profit is the Personal profit at any cost
and ethical standards motivator
Orientation to law & Law is important for Following Law in minimum Laws are barriers that must
Strategy decisions , as a guideline for decision be broken
making
Ethical Dilemmas
standards.
•Conflicting Values: The individual must choose between two or more conflicting ethical principles or
•Significant Consequences: The decision typically has significant consequences for the individual
•No Clear Right or Wrong: There is no obvious or universally accepted solution to the dilemma. Each
option has its own set of ethical justifications and potential negative outcomes.
•Moral Discomfort: The person making the decision often experiences moral discomfort or distress
activities. Reporting the wrongdoing might lead to the company's downfall and job losses, but staying silent
•Truth vs. Harm: A doctor knows a patient has a terminal illness. Should the doctor be completely honest
about the prognosis, which might cause distress, or withhold some information to protect the patient’s
emotional well-being?
•Resource Allocation: A hospital has only one ventilator left and two critically ill patients who need it.
Deciding who gets the ventilator involves making a choice between who has a better chance of recovery or
•Privacy vs. Security: A government wants to implement surveillance measures to enhance national
security, but these measures infringe on citizens' privacy. Balancing the need for security with the right to
Harming Someone
Compensation &
while Benefitting Equal Opportunity Labor Cost Privacy
Skills
Others
Fiduciary
responsibilities Misuse of Philosophy of
Product Safety Corruption Intellectual
towards Business
Shareholders Property
Leadership Issues
Resolutions
These steps are outlined as:
but deviate from what those standards intend to accomplish. Creative accounting capitalizes on
loopholes in the accounting standards to falsely portray a better image of the company.
• Creative accounting, which generally involves the preparation of financial statements with the
• Creative accounting, also called aggressive accounting, is the manipulation of financial numbers,
usually within the letter of the law and accounting standards, but very much against their spirit and
Lowering Masking
Overestimating Delaying
Depreciation Contingent
Revenues Expenses
Charges Liabilities
Undervaluing
Inventory Concealing Bad Misstating
pension
Manipulations News Assets
liabilities
Fairness:
Ethical leaders treat all stakeholders—employees, customers, suppliers, and the
Community fairly and equitably.
They strive for justice in decision-making and resource allocation.
Transparency:
Decisions and actions are made openly and are easily understood.
Ethical leaders provide clear and accurate information to stakeholders.
Accountability:
Leaders take responsibility for their actions and the actions of their
organization.
They hold themselves and their teams accountable for ethical behavior.
Ethical
Encouraging Ethical
Leadership
Ethical Culture Communication
Development
Managing
Monitoring and
Ethical
Enforcement
Challenges
Whistle Blowing
External Whistleblowing:
Description: Reporting misconduct to external authorities or the public, such as government agencies,
the media, or non-profit organizations. Example: An employee reports environmental violations to the
Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) or leaks information to a journalist.
Personal Whistleblowing:
Description: The whistleblower reports issues that directly affect their own well-being, such as
harassment, discrimination, or unsafe working conditions. Example: An employee files a complaint about
workplace sexual harassment with their HR department.
Impersonal Whistleblowing:
Description: The whistleblower reports issues that affect others or the organization as a whole, rather than
themselves personally. Example: An employee reports widespread financial fraud that affects the company’s
shareholders and customers.
Open Whistleblowing:
Description: The whistleblower’s identity is known, and they openly report the misconduct without trying to hide
their involvement.
Example: A public announcement by an employee about safety violations in a press conference.
Anonymous Whistleblowing:
Description: The whistleblower’s identity is kept secret to protect them from retaliation. They report misconduct
through anonymous channels. Example: An anonymous tip sent to a regulatory agency about illegal dumping of
hazardous waste.