Showing posts with label asset protection. Show all posts
Showing posts with label asset protection. Show all posts

Thursday, September 18, 2008

Ethics and financial crisis

With stock markets plummeting, financial institutions going belly-up, and governments on both sides of the Atlantic stepping in to bail out failing companies, the prospects for investors, the financial community, and even tax payers do not look good. And with the likely knock on effects for employment in other sectors almost certain to result in job losses, the fall-out from the current market turmoil is going to be widely felt.

For us business ethics professors, however, the picture is somewhat mixed. On the one hand, issues of social responsibility tend to be higher on the agenda when times are good. On the other, when greed and corruption contribute to downturns (such as in the post Enron wake of the early 2000s), significantly more attention can shift to issues of integrity and governance in business. Its no coincidence that the 2000s have witnessed perhaps the most sustained growth yet in the corporate responsibility 'industry' and in courses, books, conferences, and workshops on the subject.

Today's financial crisis clearly has at least some of its roots in corporate iresponsibility around the subprime mortgage market in the US. If 'responsible lending' practices had been observed (or if tighter regulatory oversight had been imposed), we might not all be in this position right now. Certainly, the financial industries of other countries appeared to be more attuned to the problem than in the US, such as in the UK, where the British Banking Association has in place a code on responsible lending:

Responsible lending is providing credit, based on background checks and professional judgement, to people who can accommodate regular repayments without getting into financial difficulty.
But although the sub-prime problem was the rockfall that got the financial landslide going, there are a number of structural issues that also need to be considered. And here we need to perhaps look at deeper institutional issues rather than the ethics of individual people or companies. As with Enron, the fault lines for disaster run through the system of risk management, regulation, transparency, business interdependence, and reward systems, not simply rogue traders crossing the ethical boundaries.

There are ethical issues here too of course, but they are at a different level to the ones that most people think of when they think about corporate responsibility. Here, we are talking about the ethics embedded in business systems and institutions, and how ethics and the law intersect to ensure that markets work effectively, fairly, and ultimately securely. Sure, a lot of our current problems with the financial crisis can be put down to individual greed, mismanagement, and bad decisions, but ultimately it goes deeper than that. Whether this means that the current crisis will be a boon to business ethics however depends on how well us ethical experts manage to get to grips with these deeper level problems.

For further reading on this, check out our paper on challenges to the business ethics curriculum, published in an early version available free online and later in the Journal of Business Ethics.

Thursday, September 4, 2008

The new business of shoplifting

It's this time of the year again. Classes have started (at least for us here in Canada) and in the first lesson it’s the thorny job of the business ethics professor to win over the skeptics. Those students who think that they shouldn’t be in this class in the first place. Those who need convincing that the law is just not enough to keep businesses on the bright side of life.

This day and age though, one doesn’t have to go far to find ammunition to make the case. This week, it can be found in a fascinating article in The New Yorker. The topic is shoplifting and how US retailers are trying to deal with it. Mind you, this is not about stingy shopkeepers trying to slap wrists of cheeky kids attempting to sneak out with a free ice cream. It is a US$ 40bn business issue for the industry. And it straddles class - remember Winona Ryder being caught with $5,000 of designer goods in Beverly Hills? It is also one of the most professionalized ‘sectors’ of the wider organized crime industry.

From a business ethics perspective this story is fascinating for at least two reasons. First, it is just mindboggling how much the industry has developed strategies, departments and instruments to prevent shoplifting. ‘Asset protection units’ as these are called – btw, relish the ‘amoralized’ language companies use! From hundreds of in-store cameras, armies of detectives on the shop floor, detailed profiling of customers, and even the operation of entire forensic labs, retailers have created their own mini law enforcement empires. The retailer Target alone faces 75,000 'theft apprehensions' a year. As their head of asset protection argues,
Even if all the U.S. attorneys across the country stopped prosecuting bank robberies, fraud, drug trafficking, and even terrorism, there would still not be enough capacity to prosecute even the apprehensions made by Target.
The result is simple enough: the tackling of this ethical issue is a core task for business. The article is a fascinating read for the challenges, risks and limits of addressing the problem in the corporate world.

The second aspect is even more striking: roughly half of all losses in retail are the responsibility of employees! It raises the thorny question of why these people commit such crimes. Fair enough, many organized crime rings try to recruit employees or even place their members as shop assistants. But for many shop assistants, being on low wages while selling $ 1,000 Armani Suits, the temptation may just be too much. As one VP of asset protection of a New York retailer argues in the article:
You're on commission selling. When times are good, you make a fortune. September through the holiday season, you're raking it in. Then Christmas is over, no one is shopping, gas is four dollars a gallon, and your paycheck went from fifteen hundred to five hundred a week and you have to pay off those bills from that Caribbean vacation you took when the money was rolling in. So you think, I'll credit my card for a thousand dollars and make out a fake return. When it works the first time, you try it again. But next time you load a little more onto your card. And the way this economy's going? We're going to be busy.
It turns our attention to what we call in our business ethics book (Chapter 4) ‘situational factors’ in ethical decision making. For some employees, given the wages and the nature of their products, the temptation is just too high. Whether security cameras and store detectives are the right answer then remains up for debate. Maybe it’s the general working conditions, the level of wages and the general identification with the company. Our guess is that a more in-depth understanding of why employees do these things would help to devise more appropriate strategies. We don’t know what you think. But we would love to hear.