Cross-cultural Issues in Business Ethics. John Hooker Carnegie Mellon University June 2007

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Cross-cultural Issues in Business Ethics John Hooker Carnegie Mellon University June 2007

Outline of the argument A new economic order. Based on cultural comparative advantage. Implications for business ethics. Acknowledge and understand differences in cultural norms. Rather than universalize ethics along Western lines. Example: corruption. Activity that undermines a cultural system.

A new economic order Movement toward a multi-polar equilibrium.

A new economic order Based on comparative cultural advantage. Much more than outsourcing. Many countries have cheap labor. Only a few have become economic powerhouses. Such as Japanese quality. Korean manufacturing. Indian information technology. Chinese entrepreneurship. Western technological innovation.

A new economic order Japanese quality Continuous improvement. Group-oriented, rather than requiring individual reward. Long time horizon. No need for cause-and-effect manipulation. Maintain group harmony by honoring everyone s ideas. Nemawashi. Hanko stamp Traditionally a part of nemawashi

A new economic order Superior operations management Just-in-time inventory management Kanban systems minimize rework, maximize flexibility. Lean manufacturing, reduced setup times. Outgrowth of keiretsu (formerly zaibatsu). Old-boy networks, trust relationships. Keidanren. Toyota factory in Japan

A new economic order Indian IT Pantheism vs. secularism No need to maintain & manipulate nature. Other coping mechanisms Inner discipline Get control of one s mind rather than the environment. Modern form: intellectual discipline, academic competition. IIT Mumbai

A new economic order Networking. Efficient way to absorb technical knowledge. A verbal culture. Well suited to academic discourse, information age. Case study: software development No need for the technology, but well suited to create it. Create an orderly world of the mind, rather than an orderly world externally. Indians see themselves as Westernizing There is a common reliance on rationality. But Indians are leveraging their own cultural traits.

A new economic order Korean Manufacturing Initially an imitation of Japanese zaibatsu. High power distance culture allowed Park Chung Hee to create the chaebol. Cozy relationship between leading industrial families and the government Allowed Korea to build major private corporations in a relationship-based culture. Park Chung Hee Korean dictator 1961-79

A new economic order Loyalty to the boss. Paternal relationship. Highly disciplined, hierarchical groups. Organized by age. Highly competitive, masculine culture. Strong national solidarity. Focus on loyalty to boss. Bottom line and short-term profitability are secondary. Korean chaebol

A new economic order Chinese entrepreneurship A cultural trait of coastal Chinese. Particularly, speakers of Yuè (Cantonese), Mĭn (Fujianese), and Wú (Shanghaiese) dialects. Uncertainty tolerant culture. Self esteem tied to wealth and status. To be rich is glorious (Deng Xiaoping). Masculine culture, competitive. Guangzhou

A new economic order Relationship-based business. Guānxì is a time-tested mechanism. World s largest economy for 8 of last 10 centuries, soon to be again. Making inroads into South America, Africa, Middle East. These countries are more comfortable with Chinese relationship-based business style than Western rule-based transparency. President Hosni Mubarak of Egypt with Chinese Trade Minister Bo Xilai, who headed a delegation of 150 Chinese businessmen.

A new economic order Western technological innovation Disenchantment of nature. Opened the way to manipulation of a secular world. Greek rationality. Technology as coping mechanism Controlling the environment rather than oneself. Support from family, friends less important. Max Weber

A new economic order Individualism. Individuals have the right to rethink everything. Students asked to reason from first principles. Do experiments, prove theorems. Individual expression, originality valued. Payoff: new ideas for technological coping mechanism.

Implications for business ethics Successful countries will retain and emphasize the cultural traits that bring them success. Including their ethical norms. They may see themselves as Westernizing. We must understand their norms and value systems. to succeed in the new world order. Electronics City, near Bangalore

Implications for business ethics Communication technology reinforces cultural divergence. Rather than homogenizing the world. Mobile phones and web sites facilitate relationship-based cultures. TV programming is increasingly regionalized. Orkut.com is an online community that connects people through a network of trusted friends. Wildly popular in Brazil.

Implications for business ethics Different ethical norms derive from different conceptions of human nature. Rule-based cultures Humans are autonomous, rational individuals. Relationship-based cultures Human existence is defined by its relatedness to others. Family, community. Filipino family

Implications for business ethics Rule-based cultures Autonomous, rational individuals must have equal status. Ethic of justice, equality, human rights. Grounded in rationality (e.g., Kant). and equal authority. Allegiance is to rules rather than persons. The rules must be self-evident and therefore universal.

Implications for business ethics Relationship-based cultures Persons do not exist apart from their participation in a larger unit. Family, ancestors, community, even the universe as a whole. This leads to an ethic of care. Synonymous with self-interest. Justice and human rights are secondary and derivative. Ndebele village

Implications for business ethics We must change the focus of business ethics. Away from primary emphasis on Western ethics. Toward a deeper understanding of value systems that stem from different conceptions of human nature. Abandon the project of universalizing ethics along Western lines. It is difficult to ground a distinction between fundamental international norms and culturallyspecific norms.

Implications for business ethics Rather, investigate how each ethical system can deal with cross-cultural issues. For example, Western system might use a generalizability test. Act only in a manner that, if generalized, would be consistent with the survival of the cultural system that allows the purposes of the action to be achieved. Immanuel Kant

Implications for business ethics Does this allow coexistence? This is an empirical question. Most cultural/ethnic conflicts are between peoples of very similar cultures. Perhaps because Territorial conflict with neighbors was once ecologically sound. Perhaps radically different cultural systems can coexist in a mutually beneficial way, much as ecosystems. Let s take advantage of differences rather than pretend they don t exist. Marvin Harris

Example: Corruption Corruption may be defined as behavior that corrupts. It undermines a cultural system. So, behavior that is corrupting in one culture may be functional in another. or corrupting for different reasons. Can apply generalizability test. Avoid actions that would corrupt the system if generalized.

Corruption Cronyism Corrupting in rule-based cultures. For example, Europe, USA. Creates a conflict of interest. Can be functional in relationship-based system. System is based on personal trust relationships. Rather than trust in the system. Possibly no conflict of interest.

Corruption Lawsuits and overt disagreements in general. Can be corrupting in relationshipbased cultures. For example, Japan and other Confucian cultures. Undermines harmony. No overarching rule system for resolving differences. Important not to give offense. Functional in rule-based cultures. Disputes resolved by appeal to rules. Courtesy, face are less important.

Corruption Bribery A weakness of relationshipbased cultures. A shortcut to relationship building. Corrupting because it undermines long-term predictability, stability. Also corrupting in rule-based cultures It undermines respect for the rules. Zheng Xiaoyu Former head of China s Food and Drug Administration, sentenced to death for accepting bribes

Corruption Cheating A weakness of rule-based cultures. Relative lack of supervision makes these cultures more efficient. But it makes cheating easy. It undermines stability and trust in the system, e.g. business scandals. Also corrupting in relationship-based cultures It undermines authority. Jeffrey Skilling, sentence to prison for fraud and insider trading in the Enron scandal

Corruption To fight corruption Preserve/restore the integrity of the system in which it occurs. Rather than try to impose incompatible practices from a different system.