Name
XMGT 216
XX/XX/12
Teacher
Grade 95/100
First I would like to challenge you to take some time out of your day to consider how countries have not only become closer together through globalization and how globalization as also created a unified moral perspective for countries that are conducting business with each other. Once you have, you will discover that management teams from across the world are realizing there are significant moral and ethical issues just waiting to be discovered by the enhanced progress we are seeing on a world wide scale. When ethics become a problem inside a specific country, just try to imagine the various issues which present themselves after the amount of people affected expands to a global scale. Now we are seeing different cultures that speak different languages all trying to find a solution to the problem. In the following essay we will cover two different articles, both focused on dealing with moral issues in two different countries from two different continents, China of Asia and India of the India-sub continent. Both of these articles help us to understand ethics on an international scale and how the business ethics of China and India compare to the business ethics of the United States.
“Business Ethics in the Chinese Context” is the second article we will take a deeper look at. This article was authored by Stephen Rothlin and printed by the Santa Clara University, SCU. Rothlin writes about the unbelievable growth that was seen regarding Chinese business ethics during 2006 and 2007. Prior to writing this article, Rothlin was employed at the Center for International Business Ethics in Beijing, China as a general secretary. Back in January of 2008, the Markkula Center for Applied Ethics Business and Organizational Ethics Partnership became modernized by Rothlin. He used the expansion he had seen in his previous trip to China in 2006 as an example for the growth he