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Moral Accounting Engagements

Are Moral Accounting Engagements “Weak Sauce”?

A commenter named “nope” replied to my post on the Supply & Demand for Moral Accounting Engagements with two quotes:

“Power concedes nothing without a demand. It never did and it never will.” Frederick Douglass

 

“First, I must confess that over the past few years I have been gravely disappointed with the white moderate. I have almost reached the regrettable conclusion that the Negro’s great stumbling block in his stride toward freedom is not the White Citizen’s Counciler or the Ku Klux Klanner, but the white moderate, who is more devoted to “order” than to justice; who prefers a negative peace which is the absence of tension to a positive peace which is the presence of justice; who constantly says: “I agree with you in the goal you seek, but I cannot agree with your methods of direct action”; who paternalistically believes he can set the timetable for another man’s freedom; who lives by a mythical concept of time and who constantly advises the Negro to wait for a “more convenient season.” Shallow understanding from people of good will is more frustrating than absolute misunderstanding from people of ill will. Lukewarm acceptance is much more bewildering than outright rejection.”
Martin Luther King.

I’ve thought about this type of criticism quite a bit: can we actually make the world a better place by sitting around and having a principled conversation about accountability systems and moral principles? It sure sounds like weak sauce, and the more momentous the issue (e.g., women’s vote, slavery) the weaker it sounds. But I don’t think the quote by Douglass and MLK’s Letter from a Birmingham jail warrant a blanket “nope” on moral accounting. Instead, they clarify its relationship to direct action.

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Moral Accounting Engagements Research Opportunities

Demand for & Supply of Moral Accounting Engagements

 NOTE:  This post is a self-contained description of the practical aspects of moral accounting, intended as the basis for interviews with activists, accountants, consultants, and organizational leaders.  Those who want more background (including a more scholarly justification of my claims) can read this. Please contact Robert Bloomfield at Cornell University if you are interested in discussing this.  A companion piece about the philosophical aspects of moral accounting is available here, intended as the basis for interviews with experts in philosophy, religion, political ideology, or culture.

Introduction

Professionals in accounting, finance and consulting offer a range of services to help organizations live up to their social obligations.  Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR) services help organizations address the concerns of those affected by their actions, while Environmental, Sustainability and Governance (ESG) services help investors allocate capital to firms that are socially responsible.  Efforts like the Sustainability Accounting Standards Board (SASB) and Impact-Weighted Accounting offer reporting standards to aid CSR and ESG.  However, those offering such services must confront difficult moral questions.  What exactly are the social obligations of an organization?  How should parties be held accountable for those obligations? How should employees balance their obligation to their employers and their obligations to society?  How should organizations prioritize their social obligations when all cannot be fulfilled?

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Diversity Equity Inclusion Moral Accounting Engagements

How can Moral Accounting Engagements be undertaken by one of the least diverse professions in the world?

One of my EMBA students, Aranthan (AJ) Jones, kindly gave me permission to publish this post, which he submitted to one of the discussion forums in my managerial accounting course.  He poses the question in the title.  I’ll write a separate post soon offering some possible answers, but for now just let you read the background that makes the question a very good one.

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Cross-Cultural Moral Accounting Engagements What is Accounting

…and chip away at everything that doesn’t look like an elephant

How do you make a sculpture of an elephant?  Start with a huge block of marble, and chip away at everything that doesn’t look like an elephant!

It’s an old joke, but a good summary of how moral accounting works toward its twin ambitions for accountability systems:  to improve moral performance, and to do so in a moral way.

It’s really hard to sculpt an elephant from the inside out, and it’s also hard to improve moral performance from the inside out.  Let’s start with the very center:  moral character.  Sure, people can be selfish, cowardly, sadistic, or otherwise fall short of most people’s moral aspirations.  But good luck changing that!  Character attacks (like calling someone racist) create predictable resistance.  And even if people will listen, can you really change them?  After all, the very definition of character is that it is a persistent trait of a person.  One of most important rules of a moral accounting engagement is that it doesn’t evaluate anyone’s character–ever!  That’s like trying to sculpt an elephant from the inside out.

If we take one step away from the center, we have social norms.  These come up a lot as an alternative to character attacks, especially when we are talking about people from cultures long ago or far away, who fall short of today’s moral aspirations.  Sure, that famous dead writer, or that international business partner, might have some pretty awful views, but that just reflects their society.  Again, good luck changing that!  Moral accounting doesn’t try to change a society’s morality.  Instead, a moral accounting engagement just attempts to document that society’s moral aspirations, and then works from there.  If they differ from our own, so be it.

But as we move to the next step, we can finally see the parts of the marble that don’t look like an elephant–how does that society enforce their moral system?  Now we are talking about accountability systems (which we can also call “governance”), and that’s something that we can actually work with–people will listen to us without too much defensiveness, and change is actually possible.

Sometimes what we’re doing does cut into some pretty sensitive parts of the elephant, because it reveals that a society doesn’t fully understand its own moral aspirations.  Lots of accountability practices that feel like morality are actually just a collection of loosely related norms, like “when someone does this bad thing, do that to them.”  And those norms can conflict in ways that violate the Moral Accountability Principles (The MAP).

For example, consider the case of abortion.  Moral views on abortion vary quite a bit from society to society, and moral accounting has nothing to say about whether one view is better than another. But it does have something to say about a society that, for example,  takes a lax approach to rape, punishes women severely for having abortions, punishes them very severely if they fail to take care of their children, provides women with little support for raising children.

Taken separately, each of these accountability practices might reflect moral aspirations that reflect the moral elephant we’re trying to sculpt. But taken together, they represent an accountability system that (in my estimation, anyway) violates the Bookkeeping,  Proportionality and Entity principles.  A poor mother who has become pregnant without her consent has two pressing obligations–to bring her unborn child to term, and to care for her other children–but no assets with which to settle both obligations.  Bookkeeping says that it’s not moral to punish someone for not accomplishing the impossible, and Proportionality says that punishment must fit the extent of the moral failing.  But despite the high stakes, the woman can’t fail much, because no one could possibly live up to these competing obligations with no assets.  And the person who actually caused this problem–the father–is not being punished at all, violating the Entity Principle.

These violations of the MAP have many solutions that don’t require changing the society’s moral aspirations.  Instead, moral accountants can just evaluate accountability practices, show that collectively they conflict, and show the range of ways they could be changed.

Of course, societies change their moral aspirations over time, and some activists might work to change them. But moral accountants only chip away at the edges, to reveal the elephant of a particular society’s current moral aspirations, whatever they may be.

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Events Moral Accounting Engagements

Panel on Business, Morality & Psychology

Yesterday I was on a panel with Cornell colleagues Laura Niemi, Kate Walsh and Maureen O’Hara, on Business, Morality and Psychology.  You can guess what I talked about:  Moral Accounting!

Here’s the video, about 90 minutes, with four 10-minute presentations.  This link starts with mine, around 42 minutes in).

UPDATE:  It looks like the link is not publicly accessible yet.  I’ll paste in a new link when I have one.

 

 

 

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Case Studies Data Algorithms and Artificial Intelligence Diversity Equity Inclusion Law Moral Accounting Engagements Technology

Hold yourself accountable – or be ready for the FTC to do it for you

The US Federal Trade Commission just issued guidance on “Aiming for truth, fairness, and equity in your company’s use of AI“.  The title of this post comes from the kicker at the end of their announcement:

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Accountability Networks Case Studies Moral Accounting Engagements

Scott Rudin: Jerks and Accountability

New York Magazine interviewed 33 people who have worked for Scott Rudin, entertainment producer long famous for being one of the few to win an Emmy, Grammy, Oscar & Tony, and newly infamous for being a jerk.  And I use that word in its technical sense, defined by philosopher Eric Schwitzgebel as follows:

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Moral Accounting Engagements

Accountability Networks Point Up as Well as Down

Dear Editor,

Thank you for submitting your rejection editorial decision for our consideration. I asked my two co-authors (who are experts in the area) to review the reviewers’ comments, and I also gave them an independent read.

Unfortunately, my co-authors find several fatal flaws with the reviewers’ comments, and I’m afraid that I agree with their assessments. As a result, I regret to inform you that I cannot accept your editorial decision in its current form.

I can, however, envision a path forward that would make your editorial decision more acceptable, and so I invite you to revise and resubmit your editorial decision.

Thank you again for submitting your editorial decision for our consideration. I look forward to receiving your revision. Good luck in your future rejection efforts.

Corresponding Author

Dave Piercey shared this letter at his recent Cornell workshop.  Tongue-in-cheek, naturally, and kind of specific to academia journals.  But it’s not hard to imagine similar satires–students grading teachers, players berating coaches, citizens indicting prosecutors, and….but hold on. 

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Case Studies Moral Accounting Engagements

College Admissions as an Accountability System

In this post, which uses a highly critical take on college admissions as a case study in moral accounting, I ask:

  • Is college admissions an accountability system?  Why or why not?

Let me start with an emphatic YES, and explain a few more subtle points, all expanding on my monograph.

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Case Studies Moral Accounting Engagements

College Admissions Case Study

 

I read a fascinating article by Matt Feeney in the Chronicle of Higher Education, The Abiding Scandal of College Admissions.  It’s paywalled, so I’ll quote some key snippets, which are enough for a simple case study.  Here are some questions to think about as you read:

  • Is college admissions an accountability system?  Why or why not?
  • Do the holistic and Coalition portfolio admissions processes fall short of any of the principles in the MAP?  Which ones, how and why?
  • Which is better from a MAP perspective:  to select randomly from the pool of qualified students, or to “launch an inquisition of their applicants’ souls”? Why or why not?
  • What changes would help these admissions processes live up to the MAP more completely?
  • What gaps or other weaknesses of moral accounting itself are revealed by this analysis?