CuriousCork
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Do you think that Irish Business is any more of less ethical than Irish society?Unforunately, there is a lack of ethics across Irish business.
Irish Society is worse. Unforunately, we have been raised on a culture of "cute hoorism" and "getting away with it" etcDo you think that Irish Business is any more of less ethical than Irish society?
And yet we are one off the least corrupt countries in the world, ranked 10th in the world as least corrupt by Transparency International. I think the Tribunals into political corruption fundamentally changed Irish society for the better. While we have high marginal tax rates which encourages evasion and a very generous welfare system which it structures to encourage dishonesty we still have high levels of compliance by international standards.Irish Society is worse. Unforunately, we have been raised on a culture of "cute hoorism" and "getting away with it" etc
In that they were similar to most State funded bodies in most countries.And maybe not 'corruption' as it is understood in the Transparency index, but feather bedding etc, that the job is there to serve them not the public.
Why?However, they were not Ethical
They were guaranteed by RTE as per the contract, but it's unclear in several of the years if any extra services were provided i.e. the years where RTE guaranteed the payment as no commercial partner signed up. So I would disagree they were 'earned'.Why?
The payment were legal but not transparent. The payments were earned by the recipient, per the agreed contract. Its a lot of money but good luck to him. What was unethical about the payment?
In the last 20 years in business I've only been asked for a bribe once and that was the one time I was dealing with a semi-state organisation. In Multinational businesses you can't even give someone a bottle of wine at Christmas anymore.I don't think Irish business is unethical, if anything and for the most part it's the opposite. No one has ever approached me for a bribe to win a deal or offered me one either. However we are a small country and as such, that generates a lot more conflicts of interest then perhaps other countries and that can be an issue.
True, we do get some bottles etc at Christmas and raffle them off to to the team but we have a pretty black and white policies on these things.In the last 20 years in business I've only been asked for a bribe once and that was the one time I was dealing with a semi-state organisation. In Multinational businesses you can't even give someone a bottle of wine at Christmas anymore.
I'm one, lived there for many years, paid my direct and indirect taxes there for many years and I have no issue claiming something I am legally entitled to claim. It is open and transparent as to what is going on, which is perhaps one of the issues with the RTE paymentsOne man's ethics is another man's smart play.
Look at the 4 million posts on this site about claiming a UK pension. I don't recall seeing a single post where someone struggled with their conscience on this - as in whether it was morally right to be claiming this windfall from the British people?
800 years!!!Thedaddyman,
There's folk that were there a year or two claiming this as you know well.
When people play the social welfare system here, questions are asked. Why is it ok to play the social welfare system in another country?
I am not - as was made clear - talking about "legal entitlement". I think it's an ethical question - there's people who don't need this money who will claim it. I'm not sure it's morally right.
On RTE Prime Time I am trying to repeat what was said ... it goes beyond that. Invoice for 75000 payment was billed under 'consultancy services.I dont think the payments were unethical. I think rte's treatment of them was unethical.
I receive a UK state pension and a private employment pension from my time there as a productive worker. I was invited to work there having applied for a job interview in response to an ad placed in an Irish newspaper by my subsequent employers, a massive British concern.Look at the 4 million posts on this site about claiming a UK pension. I don't recall seeing a single post where someone struggled with their conscience on this - as in whether it was morally right to be claiming this windfall from the British people?
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