Sunday, August 10, 2014

Using Entine and Jennings’ Eight-Question Model: Could Fannie Mae Be Labeled an Honest Company? Why or Why Not?


        Fannie Mae was developed in the 1930’s due to the housing market crash of the Great Depression.  Fannie Mae was initiated as a government-sponsored enterprise at the time President Franklin D. Roosevelt and Congress were in great need of restoring faith to the American people (Hoang, T.  and Martin, 2012/2013, p 30).  In 1938, the federal government charged Fannie Mae with a federal charter to provide affordable housing and attract investments to the housing market (Jennings, 2012, p 121).  In 1968, Fannie Mae was again chartered as shareholder-owned corporation making it responsible to gain capital from the private market and no longer the federal government (Jennings, 2012, p 121).
 Could Fannie Mae be labeled an “honest” company?  Reviewing the questions presented by Entine and Jennings Fannie Mae compliance with the law shows some creative accounting practices resulting in a fine of $125 million (Jennings, 2012, 128). Although nothing illegal transpired according to the law, but ethically it was wrong on so many levels. Fannie Mae’s sense of propriety is somewhat confusing in that the firm conforms to established standards of operation, but unjust to others in the company and society.  It is quite obvious that product claims do not match reality; executives took inflated bonuses that took away from stakeholders in the company.  Fannie Mae was unforthcoming with its company’s information by ignoring numerous reports made by Fannie Mae’s employees regarding accounting practices (Jennings, 2012, p 127).  How Fannie Mae treats its employees was answered in the previous two answers.  In 2001, Business Ethics magazine deemed Fannie Mae as one of the country’s top corporate citizens scoring high in the areas of community and diversity (Jennings, 2012, p 122). The ethical issues concerning the conduct of third-party affiliations with Fannie Mae resulted in illegal accounting practices.  However, Fannie Mae made donations to many charitable causes in return for political contacts and purposes to be used in the firms favor regarding regulatory or legislative action (Jennings, 2012, p 129).  The company’s reaction toward unfavorable or negative disclosures is to agree to disagree. 
            According to the eight-question model of Entine and Jennings, regarding a company and to determine the character of its soul by answering these questions.  The outcome as ascertained by the results of this model, the answer to the whether Fannie Mae could be labeled and “honest” company is no. The reasons why are established in the previous statement.

References

Jennings, M. M. (2012).  Business ethics case studies and selected reading. Mason,
Ohio: South-Western Cengage Learning. 
Hoang, H. and Martin, A. D. (2012/2013). The impact of the bailout of fannie mae and
Freddie mac on mortgage and housing industries. Review of BBusiness  33(1) 28-39. Retrieved from
Fannie Mae Picture


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