13 Version 1.0 Year 2012 Type: Double Blind Peer Reviewed International Research Journal Publisher: Global Journals Inc. (USA) Online ISSN: 2249-4588 & Print ISSN: 0975-5853 Global Journal of Management and Business Research A Case Study of Siemens’ Violation of Business Ethics in Argentine Based On Stakeholder Theory By Zhu Wenzhong & Fu Limin Guangdong University of Foreign Studies (GDUFS) Abstract - Hand in hand with prosper of International business brought by globalization‚ many ethical
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its success in the market. Samsung positioned itself on the technology platform. Today Samsung’s innovative and top quality products and processes are world recognized. To global business‚ and Samsung has responded with advanced technologies‚ competitive products‚ and constant innovation. • Pricing Pricing also seemed to have played a significant role in Samsung’s success. Samsung sales similar product at lower price than that of apple and Sony for eg: price of 32 inch LCD produce by Sony Cost
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TABLE OF CONTENTS Page no. 1. BACKGROUND INFORMATION ON THE COMPANY 3 2.1 Price ‘n Pride 3 2.2 Electric Express 4 2.3 Morkels 4 2.4 Barnetts 4 2. CONTACT DETAIL OF THE COMPANY 5 3.5 Figure 1 5 3. PRODUCTS AND SERVICES OFFERED BY THE COMPANY 6 3.1 Table 7 4. MANAGEMENT PROFILES OF THE COMPANY 8 5.6 Executive Directors 8 5.7.1 David Sussman (Executive
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1. • In your opinion‚ is “bribing” unethical & illegal or just a cost of doing business? Discuss this in light of Siemens’ bribery scandal. We believe that bribing is unethical because it takes away the fairness of a business transaction between bidders of a contract. Bribing also has a negative impact on competition because it allows for oligopolies and monopolies to emerge in an industry due to smaller competitors being unable to financially compete with the amount of the bribes. This in
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Case: The Bribery Scandal at Siemens AG 1. There is no question that ’bribing’ is unethical and illegal. However‚ nowadays there are a lot of developing countries in which corruption and bribing is a common practice and large companies that are targeted to expand to those countries’ markets have no other option but to pay government officials or other demanding individuals. In the Siemens case which involves bribing for contracts it is partially understandable if the company’s convicted managers
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Siemens AG is a German based company founded in 1847‚ employs over 416‚000 people in 190 countries‚ and has over 60.1 billion Euros in sales worldwide. Siemens became the electronics‚ telecommunications‚ and electrical engineering powerhouse that it is today by consistently innovating and discovering new technologies. After starting out as a small precision-engineering workshop making wire insulation and warning bells for railroads‚ the company discovered the dynamoelectric principle‚ built the first
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www.thetimes100.co.uk Motivation within a creative environment Introduction Siemens is the engineering group that is behind many of the products and services people take for granted in their daily lives. The list of products designed and manufactured by Siemens is almost endless. It includes traffic lights‚ gas turbines‚ superconducting magnets in medical scanners‚ wind generators‚ automated factories as well as domestic appliances like kettles and fridges. It generates about 40% of the UK’s
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EVALUATING THE CHANGE AGENT PROGRAM AT SIEMENS NIXDORF (A) Siemens Nixdorf Informationssysteme (SNI) was the largest European-owned computer manufacturer and information technology vender in 1994. The company was created by 1990 merger between Nixdorf Computer‚ an entrepreneurial minicomputer firm and the mainframe computer division of Siemens AG‚ the German electronics giant. The company offered a broad range of computer product‚ from personal computer and mainframes to software and support
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Case Analysis: The Bribery Scandal at Siemens AG The Siemens bribery scandal brought to light a strategic dilemma facing multi-national firms attempting to gain a competitive edge by operating abroad; specifically‚ how can they balance adherence to their own ethical and legal standards with the customs required to do business efficiently‚ or perhaps at all‚ in foreign markets? Germany’s Co-Determination law has since drawn intense criticism as hampering competitiveness and creating untenable
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1) What explains the high level of corruption at Siemens was how it was legal at one point in time to offer bribes‚ but once the law changed‚ Siemens continued to do brides that was once legal but now illegal. Also‚ when the company continued bribery‚ Siemens transferred money into a hard-to-trace bank in Switzerland to protect their business and help them win contracts. Managers rationalized it as the bribes being useful money‚ but in a way they were still making profit‚ and bribes were used as
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