Lea P. Stewart's Commentary on "Requested to Falsify Data"
Tad Tuleja in his book, Beyond the Bottom Line (Penguin
Books, 1985), discusses five stakeholders of the modern
corporation--owners, employees, customers, community members,
and society. He claims that companies are ethically obligated
to consider the best interests of each of these groups when
making decisions. And he even contends that it makes good
business sense to do so. This case can be analyzed by examining
XYZ's responsibilities to these five groups.
Assuming that XYZ is a public company, the stockholders are
the owners of the company. It would be easy to say that XYZ
stock will do better if the company never reports a chemical
spill to the state. This is a valid assumption if XYZ truly
never has a chemical spill. Under the present circumstances,
however, it seems that XYZ has had a number of spills. What
will happen to the company's stock (and, thus, the owners'
investments) if people learn that XYZ has been covering up
chemical spills for years? Is the potentially bad publicity
worth the short term gain of not reporting several relatively
minor spills as they occur?
What are the implications of this case for the employees of
XYZ? Clearly, Stephanie Simon's refusal to modify her data cost
her a job. Bruce Bennett is now in the ethically uncomfortable
position of feeling that he has to change his calculations to
avoid angering his boss. Adam Baines' reluctance to report
chemical spills to the state encourages his employees to change
their data to avoid the necessity of filing reports--in other
words, to lie. Sissela Bok reminds us in her book, Lying
(Vintage, 1978), that lies harm the liar as well as the person
being lie to. Adam's reluctance to file reports with the state
is potentially harmful to both the state and to Bruce.
How are XYZ's customers affected by this situation? XYZ has
a reputation as "an environmental leader in the chemical
industry." XYZ probably has gained a number of customers
because of this reputation, but this reputation appears to be
unjustified. Is it ethical to solicit business from customers
based on a corporate reputation that is misleading? Can an
"environmental leader" ignore regulations when it feels that
the industry is over-regulated? Do its customers deserve to
know this fact?
XYZ has violated its responsibility to its local community
when it refuses to report chemical spills that the state has
mandated should be reported. The state has determined the
acceptable limits for reporting spills. XYZ violates the trust
of the community if it does not comply with these regulations.
If XYZ truly believes that these regulations are excessive, it
should work to change them at the state level.
The final corporate stakeholder, according to Tuleja, is
society. How is society affected by XYZ's actions? Our
democratic society is based on principles of openness and
trust. Businesses are expected to deal with their stakeholders
in an open manner. Individuals trust corporations to deal with
them ethically. Of course, all corporations do not uphold these
principles at all times. But if the majority of companies
grossly violated these principles most of the time, our system
would collapse. Adam Baines' actions may seem like a minor
violation of the system. He refuses to report "a few gallons
over the limit." But how much is enough to report? If a company
begins to violate reporting standards, when does it decide that
a spill is big enough to report? What happens when each company
decides to draw the line differently? Eventually, who will
report anything?
Adam's actions are like the ripple that occurs when a rock
is thrown into a pond of water. One action has an effect that
reaches far beyond the initial circumstance. Failing to report
a "small" chemical spill is a violation of ethics that can have
an impact on a company's owners, employees, customers,
community members, and even on society.
Cite this page:
"Lea P. Stewart's Commentary on "Requested to Falsify Data""
Online Ethics Center for Engineering
8/17/2006
National Academy of Engineering
Accessed: Tuesday, May 22, 2012
<www.onlineethics.org/Resources/Cases/Falsify/FalsifyStewart.aspx>