Financial Accounting
The question is missing a clause. "…is more conducive to ethical behavior" than what? The word "more" invites comparison but there is nothing to compare the current environment to. Well, the current environment is not much different than any past environment. The regulatory environment does not dictate ethics, as ethics exist distinct from laws. Ethical behavior rests on how society itself defines ethics, and is only loosely related to the regulatory environment. So while there is definitely a tighter regulatory environment at least with the introduction of Sarbanes-Oxley and the PCAOB, these laws do not dictate ethics, just behavior (Lennox & Pittman, 2010). Indeed, an increasingly complex regulatory environment only serves to complicate the issue of individual ethics, and creates confusion among business practitioners between legal/illegal and right/wrong, the two operating entirely different conceptual spheres (Jennings, 2004).
The "business" environment is quite vague -- there are many facets to the business environment. Which facet are we working with here? There is nothing that indicates to me that there is any strong social control embedded in our society that would regulate business ethics. There is no defined set of ethics, and this leaves each company to determine its own ethical guidelines. Some are more specific and more strict than others, but society as whole does not contribute that much to these guidelines, and there is no real enforcement mechanism because most people do not make purchasing decisions based on a firm's perceived ethical behavior.
2. One of the cases of "ethical breach" that stands out is actually the Martha Stewart Omnimedia one. Stewart's breach was...
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