Yes. A good name is better than gold- being ethical means you have nothing to hid. Nothing is following you- you will never lose a job because you were too good of a person. Well any job worth having that is!
One major ethical issue with globalization is the distribution of labor and fair pay. As it stands, the lower classes are being deprived of decent-paying, dignified jobs.
In business there is no room for ethics. --------------------- An example might be a situation where the law allows you to work your labor for a virtually unlimited number of hours. It's legal but not ethical. Another example might be firing workers who were injured on the job, may be legal but not ethical. Another example, paying women lower pay for the same work, just because they are women. Legal in many cases but not ethical.
If you expect to have repeat business from a customer or other businesses (suppliers, advisors, etc) your reputation is everything. If you expect to be in business for a long time, your reputation is everything. You build a reputation by treating people fairly according to the agreed on terms, delivery dates, quality, etc. All of which is ethical behavior. If you treat your customers and suppliers unethically eventually you will pay a price. When you need their help you won't get it, if you hit a rough spot in businesses they won't help. If there are supply shortages of materials others will get those materials. Suppliers talk to each other, they talk to credit bureaus all of which hurt your business. Sometimes unethical behavior rises to the level of illegal behavior and you can be held accountable. Fraud (which has many forms) is a form of unethical behavior that can be illegal. Breech of contract can lead to civil penalties. Price fixing, collusion, discrimination can all lead to legal issues and penalties.
Consumer behavior has a large scope in that it can affect everything about business. What consumers are currently buying and what they will buy in the future, how much they are willing to pay, etc. can determine what companies produce and even if a company survives.
This helped people buy things and pay for them over a period of time. If someone didn't have all the money at one time they could pay it off week by week until they could pay it off
No. It's up to both partners to reach an agreement, but there is no legal or ethical requirement to pay for goodwill.
pay off
about 2 years
As Soon As Possible
depend s on how long you finance it for, if you finance it for 5 yrs. it will take you 5 yrs. to pay it off.
tough to find ethical issues but maybe how obese people would have to pay more??
15 years
untill you pay it off
a year
The term "sweatshop" is used to indicate a factory where people do too much work for too little pay, so no, they are not ethical.
You can use your dividens to pay the loan. Careful, talk to your ethical agent 1st.
i belive its at the time of sale unless outher wise stated in your contract