Source:
Diane Swanson, 785-532-4352, swanson@k-state.edu
http://www.mediarelations.k-state.edu/WEB/News/MediaGuide/dswansonbio.htm
News release prepared by: Amber Haag, 785-532-6415
Tuesday,
October 12, 2004
RESEARCH
SHOWS CORRELATION BETWEEN VALUES AND SALARY PREFERENCES OF BUSINESS
EXECUTIVES
MANHATTAN
-- Executives who downplay ethics and values in their decision-making
may also be the ones who prefer extraordinarily high salaries for themselves.
By
comparison, those executives who are more inclined to consider ethics
and values in their decisions preferred more fair pay throughout their
organizations.
Diane
Swanson, associate professor of management and the von Waaden business
administration professor at Kansas State University, said this is the
most significant implication of her recent research.
In
addition, Swanson said executives who are more likely to downplay values
in decisions and prefer extraordinarily high salaries are also the ones
who have received more business education.
"This
is yet more evidence of business education teaching greed and self-centeredness
instead of service to community," Swanson said. "Business
students should learn that business people not only serve themselves
but society as well. They've got to have some community mindedness or
we'll be stuck with even more ill-effects of corporate scandals in the
future.
"One
reason these findings are important is that, in the midst of corporate
scandals that have racked society and destroyed jobs and trust in business,
executives are still paid astronomical salaries," Swanson said.
"This should be questioned."
She
conducted the research with Marc Orlitzky from the University of Auckland
in New Zealand. Swanson said the results are only preliminary and more
executives must be surveyed to make stronger assertions.
Swanson
and Orlitzky's research was funded by the Australian Graduate School
of Management in Sydney, Australia.
Swanson
will be speaking at the 2004 Japha Symposium on Business and Professional
Ethics Friday, Oct. 29. Swanson's speech will be published as a chapter
in a book by Blackwell Publisher.
She
submitted a paper based on her research because it related to the theme
"The Ethics of Executive Compensation." The symposium is sponsored
by the University of Colorado.
Swanson
is also chair and founder of the Business Ethics Education Initiative,
an effort championing the need for ethics in business school curricula.
She holds a doctorate with distinction from the Katz Graduate School
of Business at the University of Pittsburgh in Pennsylvania for business
administration in strategy, environment and organization. She received
her master's in economics from the University of Missouri at Kansas
City, with honors, in 1982, and her bachelor's in business from Avila
College in 1980.
Kansas State University
is a comprehensive, research, land-grant institution first serving students
and the people of Kansas, and also the nation and the world.