Ford Pinto and Corporate Crime
Experts on corporate crime such as David O. Friedrichs (1996) used to lament the lack of attention given to white collar crime. This was due to the mistaken assumption that unlike violent street crimes, white collar crimes were victimless and therefore, less harmful.
However, recent events such as the recent Firestone tire blowouts, the rollover of Ford's rollover vehicles and Enron Company's padding of profits and Arthur Anderson's creative accounting practices have generated new interest in white collar crime. The growing litigiousness of the American public and media coverage generated by product failures have likewise put more attention on what Rosoff, Pontell and Tillman (2002) label as "the other crime problem."
Friedrichs (1997) identifies three major types of white collar crime - government crime, occupational crime and finally, corporate crime.
This paper focuses on the issue of corporate crime through a close examination of the Ford Pinto case, one of the landmark cases in corporate criminology. The first part of the paper examines the facts of the Ford Pinto case, from the supposed decision to "rush" the production of the unsafe car to the effects of the 1980 criminal trial of the Ford Motor Company for reckless homicide. The paper then uses the framework of research on white collar crime and studies on organizational culture and structure to examine the lack of safety and recall regulations that may have contributed to as much as 500 deaths (Dowie 1977).
This paper concludes that in addition to the drive for profit, the institutional norms embedded in the organizational structure of the Ford Company, as well as within the NHTSA at the time contributed significantly to the lack of both internal and external regulations. The lack of these regulations, in turn, resulted in unsafe cars caused many of its occupants their lives.
Review of Literature
Much of the literature on the Ford Pinto case focuses on how consumer safety was willingly sacrificed in the face of "corporate greed." Dowie (1977) wrote the first and definitive account in his Pulitzer Prize winning "Pinto Madness." In this expose, Dowie unearthed documents proving that the engineers and managers Ford Company knew of the Pinto's safety problems for at least seven years, but refused to make the necessary safety changes. This decision, Dowie charged, was based on the concept of profit maximization.
Strobel (1980) follows suit, with an examination of why the Pinto became "the most controversial car ever built" (169). In addition to the accidents, Strobel also discusses the ensuing recall of the Pinto, the $125 million in punitive damages awarded to a Pinto burn victim and the subsequent criminal trial over the question product safety and company liability.
Kramer (1982) argues that Ford's decision to leave the unsafe and easily-dislodged gas tank in the Pinto was a deliberate decision. This decision was again made in light of Ford management's need to profit.
Many studies on white collar crime point to the Ford Pinto case as the best-known example the evils of corporate greed. Simon and Eitzen (1990), for example, point to the Ford Pinto case as an example of a company that, for almost a decade, knowingly marketed an unsafe product. Hagan (1994) goes even further, stating, "Choosing profit over human lives, the company continued to avoid and lobby even eight years later against federal safety standards that would have forced modification of the gas tank" (376).
While these accounts present the facts of the case and compelling analyses on capitalist and corporate greed, they do not shed light on how a deliberate decision to market the unsafe product went unchallenged by any regulations, both internal (within the Ford Company) and external (within the NHTSA and other relevant government authorities).
Towards this, Cullen, Maakestad and Cavender (1987) locate the Ford Pinto case within the larger field of white collar crime and corporate criminal liability. The authors argue that part of the reason for the absence of regulations in the early 1970s was the lack of a social movement for consumer rights.
Going beyond the Ford Pinto case, is useful to look at case studies of other agencies or corporations that have experiences similar safety-related tragedies. Vaughn (1996) and Adams and Balfour (1998) for example, have conducted research on the factors that have led to the Challenger tragedy at the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA).
Vaughn concludes that the organizational and institutional processes at NASA contributed to the lack of communication regarding safety regulations.
Adams and Balfour (1998) offer a more compelling analysis; locating the lack of safety within the concept of "administrative evil."
Using the NASA case as just one example, Adams and Balfour argue the which...
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