Business Ethics Case Studies
Peter is a vice president in a large corporation. As part of his duties, he supervises fifteen managers;
fourteen of these managers are men. Only one of the managers is a black man, and one is a white female.
Peter is replacing one of the white, male managers. He has advertised the position both in house and
outside, as required by his company's hiring policies. After reviewing all of the applications, he believes
that Steve, an employee of the company for 12 years, is the most qualified applicant. However, in the pool
of applicants there are three qualified women and two qualified black men. Morally what should Peter do?
Questions Number 05: (10 marks)
1 Is it fair to hire Steve, even though this will still mean that the managers will have definite gender
and race inequity?
2. Is it fair to Steve to hire someone less qualified to agree with Affirmative Action?
3. Should Peter give up and let the other manager's vote on who should be hired?
Good Luck!
Answers
Answer:
Business Ethics Case Studies
Peter is a vice president in a large corporation. As part of his duties, he supervises fifteen managers;
fourteen of these managers are men. Only one of the managers is a black man, and one is a white female.
Peter is replacing one of the white, male managers. He has advertised the position both in house and
outside, as required by his company's hiring policies. After reviewing all of the applications, he believes
that Steve, an employee of the company for 12 years, is the most qualified applicant. However, in the pool
of applicants there are three qualified women and two qualified black men. Morally what should Peter do?
Questions Number 05: (10 marks)
1 Is it fair to hire Steve, even though this will still mean that the managers will have definite gender
and race inequity?
2. Is it fair to Steve to hire someone less qualified to agree with Affirmative Action?
3. Should Peter give up and let the other manager's vote on who should be hired?
Good Luck!