Profit maximization: The ethical mandate of business
Profit maximization: The ethical mandate of business
Journal of Business Ethics; Dordrecht; Apr 1994; Primeaux, Patrick; Stieber,
John
Source (subtitle): JBE
Volume: 13
Issue: 4
Start Page: 287
ISSN: 01674544
Subject Terms: Profit maximization
Models
Ethics
Economic theory
Profit maximization
Models
Ethics
Economic theory
Profit
Economic theory
Business ethics
Classification Codes: 3100: Capital & debt management
2410: Social responsibility
1130: Economic theory
Abstract:
A model is proposed for business ethics which arises directly from the business
practice. This model is based on a behavioral definition of the economic theory
of profit maximization and situates business ethics within opportunity costs.
Within that context, it is argued that good business and good ethics are
synonymous, that ethics is at the heart and center of business, and that profits
and ethics are intrinsically related.
Full Text:
Copyright Kluwer Academic Publishers Group Apr 1994
In the contemporary world of commerce, the very term "business ethics" creates a
kneejerk reaction in executive suites signaling negative, defensive responses.
Why? Partly because "business ethics" has become associated with abuse and
mismanagement. Partly because "business ethics" is a relatively new term, a
misunderstood concept, which frightens managers.
There also exists a tendency by detractors of the present economic system to
universalize exceptions and to think that all men and women in business are
seeking greed and power for its own sake. Basic to our argument is a sense of
faith and trust in humanity, that the vast majority of men and women in business
are struggling to do the right thing in the pursuit of good ethics. Also basic
to our argument is a faith and trust in private enterprise and its inherent
tendency towards equilibrium and balance. A few exceptions, a few mistakes do
not reflect the good ethics of the majority. That same positive, optimistic view
of humanity and of the open market is not shared by the traditional voices of
morality and ethics - philosophy, religion, and law--at least not to the
practical degree of the business enterprise.
Consider the virtually impossible task of a Defense Department contractor trying
to keep informed and updated on rapidly changing government specifications and
regulations. The minute a failure is detected, a red flag is thrown into the air
and charges of unethical cheating and over-charging the public become headlines
in our newspapers. Once the charge is made the damage is done. Human and
financial resources are immediately directed coward clearing the charges through
a bewildering maze of litigation. Cleared of deliberate or intentional
wrong-doing, it is often said that the contractor is lucky to read a fifth-page,
small-print announcement.
In this hypothetical case, as in so many others, there exists an implicit
mythology on the part of the media (and on the part of the public) which assumed
that business is inherently unethical. The business enterprise is besieged by
popular misconceptions as well as by legal, religious and academic theorists
anxious to prove that business seeks only self-serving aggrandizement, i.e., to
maximize its profits and to do so at any cost to the consumer, the community and
the environment. Constantly besieged by these kind of assertions, it is little
wonder that business is defensive in matters concerning ethics.
There are two ways in which business theory and practice can respond to negative
ethical allegations. First, there is a need for business to clarify its function
within society as a whole, i.e., to define its role along side those other
social entities concerned with ethics in general and business ethics in
particular such as academic philosophy, religion and law. Second, there is a
need for business to situate ethics within the heart and center of its very
self-identification, i.e., within private enterprise and profit maximization.
1. BUSINESS WITHIN SOCIETY
What is the role of business within society as a whole? In an earlier essay,
John Stieber addressed that question and answered it directly and simply: "to
provide the goods and services the consumer wants ..."(1) The word "wants" is
deliberately used to distance business from the judgmental implications of
personal or communal "needs." The implication here is that judgment or choice
belongs to the individual consumer.
This question of judgment demands explanation. Decidedly, the "open market" or
"private enterprise" system rests in individual decision-making. The "judge"
within this economic frame of reference is any individual who possesses the
freedom to produce or not produce, to purchase or not purchase any product he or
she so desires. According to the private enterprise purist, the market will
regulate itself without any need for externally induced controls. Likewise, in
questions of judgment, ethical decisions about the purchase or sale of a product
will be determined and/or regulated by the market in compliance with the free
choice of individuals. Ideally, there would be no need for external ethical
controls.
Who determines whether there exists a "want" for guns? The individual consumer
does. Were the individual consumer to judge that he or she had no "want" for
this particular product, it would not be produced. On the other hand, if the
producer judged, in conscience, that he or she should not produce this item, it
would not be produced, at least not by that individual. It could, however, be
produced by another individual whose ethics would allow him or her to do so.
There is, then, integral to the private enterprise economic system a bias
towards individual ethics and judgments. This bias is grounded in a positive
evaluation of individual human dignity and the capacity of the human spirit to
choose what is best for itself. That decision or judgment is, accordingly, made
by the individual who may or may not, to one degree or another, be influenced or
not influenced by implicit or explicit philosophical, religious or legal tenets.
Even though free market theory and business practice focus on the individual as
the locus of judgment or choice, that individual judgment or choice is
influenced or tempered by social, communal factors, i.e., by the judgments and
choices of others. It is precisely through genetic and environmental development
factors (influenced by philosophical, religious, and legal concerns) that this
social dimension is realized. These factors and influences situate the
individual within society and provide a context for individual decision-making.
Business and free enterprise have always valued that social dimension and have
always realized its practical significance. In practice, both the producer and
the consumer have also been conscious and aware of social customs, values and
beliefs when buying and selling. Stieber recommends an economics based not
simply on "providing goods and services the consumer wants," but doing so within
the "ethical mores of society."(2) If the individuals who comprise a particular
society perceive birth control methods to be unethical, those particular items
would not be bought. Nor would any producer, sensitive to the ethical mores of
that particular society, attempt to produce or market them. Or, perhaps he or
she would attempt production and distribution, thereby moving to change ethical
mores. That change could not or would not occur unless a significant number of
individuals would themselves choose to do so. Is that not one way in which
change is realized?
We can, of course, continue to discuss the relationship between the individual
and the community in an abstract manner, questioning to what degree any
particular relationship is more or less individualist or communal. We can also
question to what degree the individual or the community has precedence in moral,
ethical judgment. However, inquiries of that kind fall within the realm of
philosophy which is at least two, if not three, steps removed from practical
decision-making in business.
2. PROFIT MAXIMIZATION AND BUSINESS ETHICS
Perhaps an analogy may help to substantiate the argument. The individual athlete
approaches a game of football with his or her own personal sensibility to a
certain philosophical perspective, religious commitment, and adherence to the
law. That sensibility may even define the individual athlete and his or her
relationships with others. In practice, however, that sensibility is "bracketed"
or suspended as the rules of the game assume precedence. Of course, the
individual can make a prior choice to play or not to play, and perhaps
philosophical, religious or legal commitments may inspire that choice. But once
that choice has been made the rules of football dictate a certain behavior.
We would argue, as in the case of a game of football, that there are rules of
business which, in practice, take precedence. We would also argue that the rules
of business actually constitute the basis for a business ethics which is both
internally consistent and externally valid.
Essentially, we would define business ethics in terms of neo-classical economic
theory and its advocacy of profit maximization. Integral to our understanding of
profit maximization is a behavioral dimension which reaches beyond an exclusive
preoccupation with bottom-line profit and, at the same time, presumes a social
or communal dimension as integral to business. In other words, we would not
define business exclusively in terms of individualist self-aggrandizement or
self-interest but, rather, in terms of a behavioral efficiency of benefit to
both individuals and society that is embodied, but usually overlooked, in the
behavior of profit maximization.
The neo-classical theory of economic efficiency is rooted in a dual realization:
(1) that men and women in business are managers and (2) that managers allocate
scarce resources of land, labor-time, capital, and human creativity in a world
of unlimited human wants. The success or failure of a manager is measured by the
amount of goods or services produced from a given sec of scarce resources. Those
who produce the most are efficient; those who produce less are inefficient. The
human behavior driving this efficiency is prescribed in the paradigm of profit
maximization.
When business men and women profit maximize, i.e., allocate resources
efficiently, people have more of the things they want, and that is good. When
they do not profit maximize, i.e., allocate scarce resources inefficiently,
people have less of the things they want, and that is bad. This is especially
true if the things they want are food, health care, education, and other
necessities of life. Since ethics is basically a study of good and bad activity,
then the decision to profit maximize or not to profit maximize becomes a
question of applied or practical ethics.
Unfortunately, the ethical considerations prescribed in the profit-maximization
paradigm are much more complex than one might readily perceive. The simple
choice to profit maximize or not to profit maximize is deeply rooted in
behavioral tenets which tie the allocation of scarce resources to good business
as well as to good business ethics.
The origins of profit maximization, with its own ethical considerations and its
own tenets, originated in antiquity. When Adam and Eve were evicted from the
Garden of Eden they discovered how once upon a time, in illo tempore, inside the
garden they had unlimited resources. They could have anything they wanted.
Evicted from the garden, they discovered that resources were scarce and that
survival and prosperity demanded efficient management of these scarce resources.
Because they did survive, it is safe to presume that they had learned the basic
tenets of profit maximization.
There are two ways to examine the tenets of profit maximization. One is from a
technical perspective; the other from a behavioral perspective.
Technically, profit maximization is defined as that set of conditions where the
marginal revenue of the firm is equal to its marginal cost (MR = MC)(3) and the
marginal cost curve must intersect the marginal revenue curve from below. For
the manager of the firm, these conditions mean that the firm will continue to
produce as long as the revenues from each unit sold exceed the cost. As more
units are produced, the scarce resources used reach diminishing returns hereby
causing marginal cost to increase. Eventually, marginal cost will equal marginal
revenue. At that point, and only at that point, the firm will be operating at a
level of output that guarantees the community the maximum amount of goods and
services the firm can produce with the given set of resources it has.
If the firm produces at a point where marginal revenue is greater than marginal
cost (MR > MC), it is choosing a level of output that is less than the profit
maximizing output, and the community will have fewer goods and services.
Inasmuch as more homes, more education, more health care, etc. from a given set
of resources are good, and less of these goods and services from a given set of
resources are bad, there is an ethical dimension associated with any decision to
produce at an output level where marginal revenue is greater than marginal cost
(MR > MC).
If the firm produces at a point where marginal revenue is less than marginal
cost (MR < MC), it is choosing a level of output that is greater than the
profit-maximizing output, and the community has more goods and services. The
problem with this decision is that it costs more to make these additional units
of output than the revenues they generate, and the company will lose money. It
is axiomatic that any firm continuing to produce at a loss will eventually go
out of business. Therefore, what first appears to be a windfall for the
community turns into a disaster. The firm shuts down, all of the things it once
produced, including the windfall, disappear; and the community has fewer goods
and services. As before, there is an ethical dimension associated with the
decision to produce where marginal revenue is less than marginal cost (MR < MC).
Everyone would be hurt: managers, employees, stockholders, consumers and the
community as a whole, i.e., less taxes, employment and philanthropy.
Since more is better than less from a given set of scarce resources, producing
where marginal revenue is equal to marginal cost (MR = MC), profit maximizing,
is efficient and ethical. Producing where marginal revenue is greater than or
less than marginal cost, not profit maximizing, is inefficient and unethical.
That ethical judgment rests first and foremost within practical economics and
has consequences for individuals as well as for society as a whole.