While some firms are content to subscribe to the bare minimum of ethical doctrines, others have pursued a broader stakeholder perspective. The stakeholder perspective posits that ethics derives from outcomes, which places it squarely in the consequentialist perspective, and that those outcomes be considered from the perspective of all stakeholders (Phillips, 2003). This represents an advancement on Friedman's theory, since he considered only the perspective of the firm's shareholders. Friedman's theory was built on the idea that the shareholders have put up their money to invest in the firm and allow management to build it, therefore management is an agent of the shareholder. The stakeholder perspective recognizes the contribution of all stakeholders. Employees also make an investment in the firm, and that investment may go beyond for which they are compensated. Customers, suppliers and other groups as well are invested to different degrees. The environment and society at large are also stakeholders who can be both harmed and helped by the company's actions. While Friedman argued that employees, customers and suppliers are all engaged in economic, mutually beneficial transactions with the company, social and the environment are not. Outcomes for those stakeholders are externalities of the firm's behavior. These externalities have a cost but that cost is not typically transferred to the company directly. Therefore, the company must consider these costs in order to be ethical, certainly by utilitarian standards.
The stakeholder perspective contrasts with the perspective that allows the law to dictate ethics, which is akin to...
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