Corporate restructuring has had a profound impact on the US economy. While the problems of restructuring have been discussed in great detail, the solutions are elusive. What can or should be done to mitigate the impacts of restructuring on workers, communities, and society at large? The stumbling‐block to finding an answer to this question is the lack of a satisfactory ethical framework for evaluating restructuring decisions. The purpose of this essay is to develop such a framework. The first part of the paper reviews the ethical guidance provided by the standard theory of the firm. The second part explores an alternative framework based on the work of Elizabeth Anderson. Her “expressive theory of rational action” offers a more promising framework for evaluating management decisions with significant costs to society.
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1 October 1998
Research Article|
October 01 1998
Toward an ethics of corporate restructuring Available to Purchase
Dell Champlin
Dell Champlin
Department of Economics, Eastern Illinois University, Charleston, Illinois, USA
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Publisher: Emerald Publishing
Online ISSN: 1758-6712
Print ISSN: 0306-8293
© MCB UP Limited
1998
International Journal of Social Economics (1998) 25 (9): 1353–1366.
Citation
Champlin D (1998), "Toward an ethics of corporate restructuring ". International Journal of Social Economics, Vol. 25 No. 9 pp. 1353–1366, doi: https://doi.org/10.1108/03068299810213963
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