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2015 | Book

Sharing Profits

The Ethics of Remuneration, Tax and Shareholder Returns

Author: John N. Reynolds

Publisher: Palgrave Macmillan UK

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About this book

Any decision by a company regarding the use of profits to pay tax, remuneration or shareholder returns has ethical implications. Sharing Profits reviews high-profile ethical issues facing companies in how profits are used, and proposes a framework for understanding the ethical implications of decisions.

Table of Contents

Frontmatter
1. Introduction and Summary
John N. Reynolds
2. Greed and Self-Interest? Criticism of Corporate Decisions on Sharing Profits
John N. Reynolds
3. Examining the Issues
John N. Reynolds
4. Putting Business Ethics into Context
John N. Reynolds
5. Applying Business Ethics
John N. Reynolds
6. Shareholders and Returns
John N. Reynolds
7. Employees and Remuneration
John N. Reynolds
8. The State and Tax
John N. Reynolds
9. The Rights and Duties of Shareholders, Employees and the State
John N. Reynolds
10. Ethical Frameworks and Case Studies
John N. Reynolds
Postscript
Abstract
Business can play a major role in establishing strong ethical principles, but cannot do so in isolation from the rest of society. This extends to the impact of business being able to assist in reducing poverty and promoting equality of opportunity. There are well recorded instances of poor decision making, plainly unethical actions, and abuse of communities by businesses.There are two issues which are poorly understood but vitally important in the ethical position of business: the methodology of investment decisions, and the extent of the reliance of business on the rule of law. The well established and almost globally used financial principles relating to investment decisions — by institutional investors and by companies — are in themselves consistent with the ethical duties on companies, and in fact provide a foundation for business to be a proponent of strong ethical values, especially equality and justice.The ethical duties of a company and its shareholders to governments are profound. A large company cannot operate and grow without the benefit of stability, a range of social goods — for example education — and the preservation of contract law and limited liability. This has profound consequences from both a utilitarian and deontological perspective.This book has argued that globalisation and the internet have not just fundamentally changed government, but have fundamentally changed relations between the multinational company and governments, individually and internationally.
John N. Reynolds
Backmatter
Metadata
Title
Sharing Profits
Author
John N. Reynolds
Copyright Year
2015
Publisher
Palgrave Macmillan UK
Electronic ISBN
978-1-137-44545-2
Print ISBN
978-1-349-49578-8
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1057/9781137445452