Business Ethics: Concepts & CasesPearson Prentice Hall, 2006 - 437 pages For courses in Business Ethics This popular text on Business Ethics introduces the reader to the ethical concepts that are relevant to resolving moral issues in business; imparts the reasoning and anaytical skills needed to apply ethical concepts to business decisions; identifies moral issues specific to a business; provides an understanding of the social, technological, and natural environments within which moral issues in business arise; and supplies case studies of actual moral conflicts faced by businesses. The ethical landscape of business is constantly changing and this edition has been revised to keep pace with those changes most effecting business: accelerating globalization, constant technological updates, proliferating of business scandals. |
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... sellers want to sell , and at which the highest price buyers are willing to pay exactly equals the lowest price sellers are willing to take . demand curve A line on a graph indicating the most that consumers ( or buyers ) would be ...
... sellers toward the so - called point of equilibrium . In doing so , they achieve three major moral values : ( a ) they lead buyers and sellers to exchange their goods in a way that is just ( in a certain sense of just ) ; ( b ) they ...
... sellers and the pure monopoly market with only one seller . Market structures of this " impure " type are referred ... sellers and In an oligopoly , two of the seven conditions that characterize the purely competi- tive market are ...
Contents
CASES FOR DISCUSSION | 51 |
Ethical Principles in Business | 57 |
Chapter 2 | 74 |
Copyright | |
14 other sections not shown