Refer to this case, of about the Ford Pinto case, I have been read about this topic from web pages and forum that have been discuses. Here are some of studies that I have been made to finish this paper work in different aspects of ethics and professionalism. In the ‘Ford Pinto Case Study’, it seems clear that Ford management and its engineers did not intend to make an unsafe product, and that more than likely the outcome of their product resulted primarily from, the accelerated design and production schedule of the Ford Pinto. During an era in which the government safety standards of today were non-existent, Ford was not obligated to adhere to the safety standards in question regarding the Ford Pinto. This may have contributed to the business decision made by Ford …show more content…
That reason alone was Fords mistake because of the accelerated schedule to make the Pinto, at the time of the test they already had machinery made. After Ford had seen though more than 40 crash tests that the gas tank had failed, they should have stopped and reanalyzed what the costs and benefits would be Newton & Ford. Because Ford had jump ahead and produced highly expensive machinery the cost to reproduce the mold would have taken most of their profits not the small plastic piece that would have made the Pinto safer. Ford placed the company in this very bad predicament and should have never tried to accelerate the production schedule. Something putting a human life at risk needs to have the right precautions taken. Ford should have never decided to go with the Cost-Benefit analysis because there is no price that can be put on a human life. It is morally wrong to presume someone’s family member is worth less than a small piece of plastic that could have saved their