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Survey Finds ‘Disturbing’ and ‘Treacherous’ Ethics Landscape for U.S. Businesses

Dec 3rd, 2007 • Posted in: Research Report

From the Ethics Resource Center (ERC):

“Six years after high-profile corporate scandals rocked American business, there has been little if any meaningful reduction in the enterprise-wide risk of unethical behavior at U.S. companies, according to the Ethics Resource Center’s 2007 National Business Ethics Survey®….

“Interviews with almost 2,000 employees at U.S. public and private companies of all sizes for the biennial NBES® show disturbing shares of workers witnessing ethical misconduct at work — and tending not to report what they see. Conflicts of interest, abusive behavior and lying pose the most severe ethics risks to companies today.

“The measurable lack of progress in business ethics should signal a need for company management, Boards of Directors, policy-makers, investors and consumers to reassess their approach to that challenge, said ERC President Patricia Harned, Ph.D.

“‘Despite new regulation and significant efforts to reduce misconduct and increase reporting when it does occur, the ethics risk landscape in American business is as treacherous as it was before implementation of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002,’ Dr. Harned said.

“Over the past year, more than half (56 percent) of employees surveyed had personally observed violations of company ethics standards, policy, or the law. Many saw multiple violations. More than two of five employees (42 percent) who witnessed misconduct did not report it through any company channels.

“According to Dr. Harned, ‘There is a strong sense of futility and fear among employees when it comes to reporting ethical misconduct, and that increases the danger to business. More than half (54 percent) of employees who witnessed but did not report misconduct believed that reporting would not lead to corrective action. More than a third (36 percent) of non-reporters feared retaliation from at least one source; but our research shows that having a strong ethical culture virtually eliminates retaliation.’

” ‘Employees at all levels have not increased their ‘ethical courage’ in recent years,’ Dr. Harned said. ‘The rate of observed misconduct has crept back above where it was in 2000. And employees’ willingness to report misconduct has not improved, either.’

” ‘The good news is that the rate of misconduct is cut by three-fourths at companies with strong ethical cultures, and reporting is doubled at companies with comprehensive ethics programs,’ said Dr. Harned. ERC helps organizations design and measure the strength of their culture and the effectiveness of ethics programs….

“The NBES also found most employees prefer to report misconduct to a person, especially someone with whom they already have a relationship, rather than to a company ‘hotline.’ Only 3 percent of misconduct reports were made to company hotlines….”

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