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What’s the Right Thing to Do? An Ethics Toolkit for Accountants

What’s the Right Thing to Do? An Ethics Toolkit for Accountants. A presentation to the Association of Government Accountants March 12, 2014. Morality. Some definitions:

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What’s the Right Thing to Do? An Ethics Toolkit for Accountants

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  1. What’s the Right Thing to Do? An Ethics Toolkit for Accountants A presentation to the Association of Government Accountants March 12, 2014

  2. Morality • Some definitions: • Moral--of, pertaining to, or concerned with the principles or rules of right conduct or the distinction between right and wrong; ethical • Immoral--violating moral principles; not conforming to the patterns of conduct usually accepted or established as consistent with principles of personal and social ethics. • Amoral--having no moral standards, restraints, or principles; unaware of or indifferent to questions of right or wrong • Nonmoral--having no relation to morality; neither moral nor immoral

  3. Hypotheticals • Classic trolley car dilemma • Business dilemmas

  4. Hypotheticals • Does it matter when a life is involved versus a livelihood? • Why or why not? • What is the role of profitability? • Does the same framework for making decisions apply to all of the different hypotheticals?

  5. Emerging Principles • The right thing to do depends upon the consequences that will result from the action. • Consequentialism locates morality in the state of the world that will result from the thing you do. • The right thing to do has to do with the intrinsic characteristic of the act. • Categorical reasoning locates morality in certain absolute moral requirements, in certain duties and rights. • The right thing to do has to do with the virtues and values that define the decision maker • Virtue locates morality in the qualities of character that the decision maker wishes to cultivate in himself or herself and in the community.

  6. Why and How to Examine these Questions • Skepticism—Throughout the centuries, these questions have never been answered. So, why study them? Can they ever be answered? • The response to skepticism… • Philosophical debate versus applied moral reasoning.

  7. What does it take to be ethical? • Moral sensitivity • Moral reasoning • Moral decision making • Moral courage and action

  8. Moral sensitivity • Perception • Attention • Awareness of ethical dimension to decisions • Ability to recognize impact of decisions on others. • A capacity to recognize emotions experienced by others—empathy. • Horton’s sensitivity • Heard a small noise then turned toward the sound • His senses told him it was nothing • “I’ll help you said Horton, ‘But who are you? Where?’” • “He looked and he looked. He could see nothing there.” • His sensitivity told him to keep looking and listening • “I’ve never heard tell of a small speck of dust that is able to yell” • “…I think that there must be someone on top of that small speck of dust” • “…Some sort of creature of very small size, too small to be seen by an elephant’s eyes.”

  9. Moral Reasoning • Levels of moral development • Preconventional—focus on self • Conventional—focus on maintaining relationships and norms • Postconventional—focus on justice for society as a whole • Horton’s reasoning: • “A person’s a person, no matter how small.” • “I’ve got to protect them. I’m bigger than they. So he plucked up the clover and hustled away.” • “Please don’t harm all my little folks, who have as much right to live as us bigger folks do.”

  10. Moral Decision Making • Illustrative decision making model (in textbook out of which I teach) • Recognize a situation as a potential ethical dilemma. • Obtain relevant facts • Identify ethical issues from the facts • Identify stakeholders • Identify alternatives • Identify consequences • Decide • Others

  11. Moral Decision Making • Sense the elements of a moral issue. • Identify your gut reaction. • State the moral issue. • Evaluate the values and virtues that your gut reaction honors. • Are they consistent with the values and virtues that you wish to honor? • Are there other alternatives that would be more consistent with your values and virtues. • Determine whether you have an overriding duty • Would I want everybody in my situation to behave as my gut is telling me to behave? • Is there an alternative that I could wish to be a universal law of behavior? • Is there an alternative that respects the rights of others more completely? • Consider the consequences • If you were to go with your gut reaction, what would be the economic, legal, and regulatory consequences? • Is your gut reaction appealing because the consequences to you are appealing? • Is there an alternative that produces more satisfying consequences to all parties involved? • Consider the community of which you are a part • Consider the values and the personal narrative that ties you to a community. • Do you have an obligation tied to your role within a community? • Make your decision • Marshal organizational support • Act

  12. Moral Decision Making • Explicit vs. implicit use of a model. • Gut reaction vs. logic and reason. • Instinctive vs. learned • Discrete vs. continuous • Horton’s decision making • “…some poor little person who’s shaking with fear that he’ll blow in the pool! He has no way to steer.” • “I’ll just have to save him. Because after all, a person’s a person, no matter how small.”

  13. Moral Courage/Moral Action • Depends on the work done in the previous stages. • Without moral action, the work done in the other stages doesn’t amount to much. • What are the reasons why we fail to act in accordance with our values and beliefs? • Horton’s Courage: • Doubt • Ridicule: “I think you’re a fool!...Your the biggest blame fool in the Jungle of Nool.” • Isolation: “Through the high jungle tree tops, the news quickly spread: ‘He talks to a dust speck! He’s out of his head!” • Physical and economic threats: • “While Horton chased after, with groans, over stones that tattered his toenails and battered his bones.” • “You’re going to be roped! And you’re going to be caged!”

  14. Ethical Perspectives • Egoism • Utilitarianism • Rights • Justice • Virtue ethics • Communitarian ethics

  15. Egoism • Psychological egoists—consider only consequences to self • Ethical egoists—believe that considering only consequences to self is the most ethical approach. • Moral agents ought to act in their own self-interests. • Effects on others are incidental—should not be considered in determining what is best. • Contrast this view with the principles stated in the Code of Conduct • Before you dismiss this perspective, reflect honestly on the extent to which egoism plays a role in your decision-making processes. • Horton: The kangaroo seemed to be acting through egoism, considering Horton’s behavior as a threat and using her power to remove the threat.

  16. Utilitarianism • Jeremy Bentham, John Stuart Mill • “The greatest good for the greatest number” • Focus on consequences • Cost/benefit analysis • Problems • Does not respect rights of the individual • Impossible to count all costs • Assigning a common currency of value • Putting a dollar value on human life—e.g.,Ford Pinto case • Amoral analytical tools such as cost/benefit analyses often trump serious and thoughtful utilitarian analysis and masquerade as moral decision making. (e.g. Ford Pinto case and KPMG tax shelter case).

  17. Ford Pinto Case • Cost/Benefit analysis of recalling Pintos and retrofitting a bladder to prevent future explosions: • Benefits—By recalling Pintos, the following costs could be avoided:Savings: 180 burn deaths, 180 serious burn injuries, 2100 burned vehiclesUnit Cost: $200,000 per death, $67,000 per injury, $700 per vehicleTotal Benefit: ((180 x $200,000) + (180 x $67,000) + (2,100 x $700)) = $49.5 million • Costs—By recalling Pintos, the following costs would be incurred:Sales: 11 million cars, 1.5 million light trucksUnit Cost: $11 per car, $11 per truckTotal Cost: ((11,000,000 x $11) + (1,500,000 x $11)) = $137 million • The cost/benefit analysis suggests that Ford Motor Company is morally obligated to make the profit maximizing choice to settle litigation as it arises according to the calculations above rather than to incur the excessive costs of recall.

  18. KPMG Tax Shelter Case Excerpts from memo prepared by KPMG tax personnel: • First the financial exposure to the Firm is minimal. Based upon our analysis of the applicable penalty sections, we conclude that the penalties would be no greater than $14,000 per $l00,000 in KPMG fees. Furthermore, as the size of the deal increases, our exposure to the penalties decreases as a percentage of our fees. For example, our average deal would result in KPMG fees of $360,000 with a maximum penalty exposure of only $31,000. • This further assumes that KPMG would bear 100 percent of the penalty. In fact, as explained in the attached memo, the penalty is joint and several with respect to anyone involved in the product who was required to register. Given that, at a minimum, Presidio would also be required to register, our share of the penalties could be viewed as being only one-half of the amounts noted above. If other OPIS participants (e.g. Deutche [sic] Bank, Brown & Wood, etc.) were also found to be promoters subject to the registration requirements, KPMG's exposure would be further minimized. Finally, any ultimate exposure to the penalties are abatable if it can be shown that we had reasonable cause. • http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/shows/tax/schemes/3.html#ixzz1bxomzHmW • http://www.law.cornell.edu/uscode/text/26/6111?quicktabs_8=1#quicktabs-8 • http://www.law.cornell.edu/uscode/text/26/6707A

  19. Rights--Duty • Immanuel Kant • “I ought to act only in such a way that the guiding principle for my actions would become a universal law” • “Treat humanity as an end of itself rather than a means to an end.” • Seuss: “A person’s a person, no matter how small.” • Problem—distinguishing among competing rights or duties. • Public interest

  20. Justice—Social Contract • Thomas Hobbes • State of nature—nasty, brutish, and short • Origins of society—cede natural rights for protection • John Locke • Government should act as impartial agent deriving power from the consent of the governed • John Rawls • “Veil of ignorance” • “Social and economic decisions should be of benefit to the least advantaged members of society” • Egalitarianism • Seuss: “I’ve got to protect them. I’m bigger than they.” • Social Contract—in what sense does accounting derive from a social contract?

  21. Virtue Ethics • Aristotle • “Justice means giving people what they deserve” • “Meaning of life is pursuit of happiness and the means of attaining happiness is through living a virtuous life” • Focus on individual choices • Telos—purpose • To reason about justice in distribution of resources we need to reason about the telos or purpose of the item in question and the virtues we wish to honor with the distribution of resources.

  22. Communitarian Perspective • MacIntyre • We have certain moral ties that we cannot trace to an act of consent • Narrative conception of the self. • What am I to do? Depends upon the story of which I am a part. • We can’t make sense of our lives without taking into account our roles. • The moral choice is the one that balances virtues and values of the community with fundamental duties.

  23. Consequentialism within a Framework

  24. Duty within a Framework

  25. Virtue within a Framework

  26. Accounting as a Profession • What is a profession? Common attributes • Skill—development of intellectual skill or knowledge • Values—adherence to shared values reflected in a code of conduct • Duty—responsibility to serve in the public interest • Autonomy—community grants the power to train, license, and regulate to the profession itself. (arguably, this is a result of the first three attributes rather than a fourth attribute). • Does accounting possess these attributes? • What are the implications for accounting, accountants, and you, personally?

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