The latest scandal in the Financial Industry was Wells Fargo’s creation of over 2 million false accounts in September of 2016. It is undeniable that the actions from the employees by creation fake bank accounts and credit cards is not an ethical dilemma. In fact, these actions are not only unethical, but also illegal and therefore, should be penalized by court. However, the company’s actions before and after are ethically questionable. First, were the sales expectations too high? And second, why where 5,300 employees fired, but none of them were high level executives? The ethical dilemmas should be centered on the managerial decisions from Wells Fargo.
Nowadays, monopolies no dot exist. Every company is under extreme pressure from competitors and often times, the pressure leads managers to take unrealistic decisions. For example, companies seek metrics like maximize profit, to gain market share or to reduce risk. However, the ambition or competitiveness leads managers to make utilitarian decisions. In other words, they forget about the means, and focus only in the end result. It is very likely that high level executives from Wells Fargo had unrealistic expectations and this led to a waterfall effect to the low level employees.
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Unfortunately, these decisions were taken without any ethical perspective analysis. Not only did the customers resulted affected, but also customer service employees who had to explain unreasonable decisions to
The Wells Fargo scandal involved a variety of stakeholders who have stake in the issue; however, the main stakeholders include the consumers, the employees and their families, and stockholders of the organization. The affect these stakeholders suffer varies, but the ultimate affect the scandal has had is violation of trust by Wells Fargo and its leadership. When examining this situation, the main stakeholders who suffered the greatest harm from the scandal were the customers who fell victim to the fraud and had their privacy violated by an organization they trusted. In the course text, Trevino and Nelson spoke of the importance of trust and its importance in a service economy. Wells Fargo violation of the consumers’ trust has ultimately added
The word “fraud” was magnified in the business world around the end of 2001 and the beginning of 2002. No one had seen anything like it. Enron, one of the country’s largest energy companies, went bankrupt and took down with it Arthur Andersen, one of the five largest audit and accounting firms in the world. Enron was followed by other accounting scandals such as WorldCom, Tyco, Freddie Mac, and HealthSouth, yet Enron will always be remembered as one of the worst corporate accounting scandals of all time. Enron’s collapse was brought upon by the greed of its corporate hierarchy and how it preyed upon its faithful stockholders and employees who invested so much of their time and money into the company. Enron seemed to portray that the goal of corporate America was to drive up stock prices and get to the peak of the financial mountain by any means necessary. The “Conspiracy of Fools” is a tale of power, crony capitalism, and company greed that lead Enron down the dark road of corporate America.
According to Emily Glazer of the Wall Street Journal, Wells Fargo’s Sales Practice Scandal is a result of their corporate culture. The upper level executives could be getting nothing as their bonuses this year as the board continues to decide. This is because those men and women are responsible for the actions of those who they employ/supervise Making money has been the firm’s primary goal for many years and the higher up’s all the way down to the lower managers are responsible for creating this type of environment. According to the Wall Street Journal “One manager…in an email peppered with exclamation points and capital letters…urged her employees to ignore the bosses and get sales up at any cost, says someone who saw the email.” This is a perfect example of terrible managing. Throwing ethics and good conduct out the window just so that a few of the staff get bonuses at the year’s end is just wrong. In class, we constantly discuss the ethics involved in business and recently we’ve spent a lot of time on corporate culture. Shockingly enough, in last year’s annual report the company
Is regulation really doing its job efficiently? Is it an accomplice and involved in such kind of malpractices? I feel that there are a possibility and a fragment of truth to such allegations. It is implausible that Wells Fargo had mastered the art of manipulating the system without regulators getting a hint about it. No deception plan can be a full-proof plan if there are people involved in it.
According to an article on www.housingwire.com, 2017, Wells Fargo CEO, Tim Sloan, made the decision to close over 400 branches in the United States. The fake account scandal fueled this decision because the company lost 746 million dollars in revenue. The closures can save Wells Fargo about 2 billion dollars by the end of
On September 8 2016, the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFBP) announced that it was taking an enforcement action against Wells Fargo Bank . Wells Fargo is a Fortune 100 company and one of the "Big Four Banks" of the United States. Investigations conducted by the Bureau revealed that employees of the bank created unauthorized deposit and credit card accounts across the country to meet sales goals. Over the years, the bank’s employees opened over 1.5 million fraudulent bank accounts and 0.5 million fake credit card accounts for customers, to meet sales targets and obtain bonuses. The affected consumers, were being harmed by the associated charges and fees for these accounts. The fees include insufficient funds or overdraft fees for the deposit accounts and annual fees for credit card accounts.
Until the intent or motive is recognized, a problem cannot be described or solved. This should be a major question to ask in the Wells Fargo case. Most workers, especially in sales and marketing jobs are known to be compensated and promoted based on their performances (number of products and services sold, number of set targets met). So it is possible that Wells Fargo compensation and promotion structure motivated these employees to engage in such fraudulent acts in order to boost their incentives and bonuses which was measured based on their performance. Because it is surprising that such huge number of employees would engage in such acts to cheat customers for a period of five years. Both former and current Wells Fargo employees told regulators that their motivation to open unauthorized accounts was because of the compensation policies and felt extreme pressure to do that to benefit from such policies (Corkery
All the working staffs should be trained to be trustworthy employees so that this type of behavior is curbed in the future. Every person need to be feeling secure when having their money in the bank (Higgins, 2015). Though it shall be a difficult task especially maintaining the old customers apart from creating new account with the bank. The bank is supposed to create a video series which is only view internally in which the senior executives are require to have a discussion on all the grey areas of ethics. Through this they shall be able to manage their business in terms of making operational and managerial decisions. These videos shall play a major role in the management of the operations in the bank. The bank should explain to its employees that after they are found guilty in the bank they shall be fined before being
It’s not very uncommon to see headlines of money hunger CEO’s or even a small group of decision making conducting unethical behaviors in their best interests. Generally, those conducting the unethical behaviors have the opportunity to gain from their actions. In the Wells Fargo scandal, this is not the case. This scandal was not acted out at the top, but yet through the front line employees. This scandal was also unusual due to the amount of
Enron’s ride is quite a phenomenon: from a regional gas pipeline trader to the largest energy trader in the world, and then back down the hill into bankruptcy and disgrace. As a matter of fact, it took Enron 16 years to go from about $10 billion of assets to $65 billion of assets, and 24 days to go bankruptcy. Enron is also one of the most celebrated business ethics cases in the century. There are so many things that went wrong within the organization, from all personal (prescriptive and psychological approaches), managerial (group norms, reward system, etc.), and organizational (world-class culture) perspectives. This paper will focus on the business ethics issues at Enron that were raised from the documentation Enron: The Smartest Guys
The reason why Well Fargo Bank is an ethical quandary would be how they have gotten a fine for 185 Million dollars and have fired over 5,300 which were employee and manager.
Hiding or divulging information: Goldman bet against their clients several times. They knew material information on certain investment; however, they never communicated that to their clients because they were making money off them.
Business Industry has witnessed the outcomes of bad moral decisions taken by business leaders. Enron’s story is only one example of corporate scandals and cases of bad moral decisions, which has not only shaken the public trust in corporations, but also affected the bank accounts of investors and employees. Before the bankruptcy of Enron; it was included in one of the fortune 500 companies after its fraudulent accounting case the share went down to $1 (Enron scandal, 2010; PBS, 2002; Godwin, 2006; Godwin, 2008).
The overwhelming facts point to a shady underworld of self-dealing and opportunistic exploitation of the poor and working class, which was until recently, well hidden from the commoner. The executives of WorldCom and Enron provide real world examples of unethical business practices, where the desire to make money for their shareholders transcended into an addiction to greed and self-dealing that were displayed by their, “excessive pay, perks, and golden parachutes”(Carson 392) at the expense of all stakeholders. All is not lost, there are corporations that pride themselves in their sound business model and commitment to ethical business practices. Such companies as Eaton Corporation, and Weyerhaeuser, who according to Ethisphere.com, a business ethics watchdog, are among the “2010 World`s most ethical companies.” (Ethisphere)
Companies face tough decisions during times of economic downturn -- they cut costs to stay profitable, and when times get very tough, they may decide to make those cuts very deep. These cuts will eventually affect employees. Astratech Communications International (ACI) faced these tough cost cutting decisions. CEO George Anderson started cutting costs with reduced work weeks and pay for employees. Eventually, product demand dropped to the point where George felt layoffs were inevitable. There were multiple approaches to this decision-making process, and all of them could be considered ethical depending on the ethical framework used. This paper examines the ethical issues surrounding George’s reduced work week and layoff decisions