2.99 See Answer

Question: In order to meet strong competition from

In order to meet strong competition from Volkswagen as well as other foreign domes- tic subcompacts, Lee Iacocca, then president of Ford Motor Co., decided to introduce a new vehicle by 1970, to be known as the Pinto. The overall objective was to produce a car at or below 2,000 pounds with a price tag of $2,000 or less. Although preproduction design and testing normally requires about three and a half years and the arrangement of actual production somewhat longer, design was started in 1968 and production commenced in 1970. The Pinto project was overseen by Robert Alexander, vice president of car engineering, and was approved by Ford’s Product Planning Committee, consisting of Iacocca, Alexander, and Ford’s group vice president of car engineering, Harold MacDonald. The engineers throughout Ford who worked on the project “signed off ” to their immediate supervisors, who did likewise in turn to their superiors and so on to Alexander and MacDonald and, finally, Iacocca. Many reports were passed up the chain of command during the design and approval process, including several outlining the results of crash tests and a proposal to remedy the tendency for the car to burst into flames when rear-ended at twenty-one miles per hour. This tendency was caused by the placement of the car’s gas tank between the rear axle and the rear bumper such that a rear-end collision was likely to drive the gas tank forward to rupture on a flange and bolts on a rear axle housing for the differential. The ruptured tank would then spew gas into the passenger compart- ment to be ignited immediately by sparks or a hot exhaust system. The remedies available to Ford included mounting the gas tank above the rear axle, which would cut down on trunk space, or installing a rubber bladder in the gas tank. Ford experimented with the installation of
In order to meet strong competition from Volkswagen as well as other foreign domes- tic subcompacts, Lee Iacocca, then president of Ford Motor Co., decided to introduce a new vehicle by 1970, to be known as the Pinto. The overall objective was to produce a car at or below 2,000 pounds with a price tag of $2,000 or less. Although preproduction design and testing normally requires about three and a half years and the arrangement of actual production somewhat longer, design was started in 1968 and production commenced in 1970.
The Pinto project was overseen by Robert Alexander, vice president of car engineering, and was approved by Ford’s Product Planning Committee, consisting of Iacocca, Alexander, and Ford’s group vice president of car engineering, Harold MacDonald. The engineers throughout Ford who worked on the project “signed off ” to their immediate supervisors, who did likewise in turn to their superiors and so on to Alexander and MacDonald and, finally, Iacocca.
Many reports were passed up the chain of command during the design and approval process, including several outlining the results of crash tests and a proposal to remedy the tendency for the car to burst into flames when rear-ended at twenty-one miles per hour. This tendency was caused by the placement of the car’s gas tank between the rear axle and the rear bumper such that a rear-end collision was likely to drive the gas tank forward to rupture on a flange and bolts on a rear axle housing for the differential. The ruptured tank would then spew gas into the passenger compart- ment to be ignited immediately by sparks or a hot exhaust system.
The remedies available to Ford included mounting the gas tank above the rear axle, which would cut down on trunk space, or installing a rubber bladder in the gas tank. Ford experimented with the installation of 
rubber bladders but apparently decided they were not cost effective. Later, as part of a successful lobby effort against government regulations for mandatory crash tests (crash tests were delayed eight years, until 1977), Ford’s cost–benefit analysis came to light in a company study titled “Fatalities Associated with Crash-Induced Fuel Leakage and Fires.” As the details previously outlined show, the costs of installing the rubber blad- der vastly exceeded the benefits.
Ford took the $200,000 figure for the cost of a death from a study of the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration, which used the estimates in the table on the previous page.
Questions
1. Was the decision not to install the rubber bladder appropriate? Use the 5-question framework to support your analysis.
2. What faults can you identify in Ford’s cost–benefit analysis?
3. Should Ford have given its Pinto customers the option to have the rubber bladder installed during production for, say, $20?

rubber bladders but apparently decided they were not cost effective. Later, as part of a successful lobby effort against government regulations for mandatory crash tests (crash tests were delayed eight years, until 1977), Ford’s cost–benefit analysis came to light in a company study titled “Fatalities Associated with Crash-Induced Fuel Leakage and Fires.” As the details previously outlined show, the costs of installing the rubber blad- der vastly exceeded the benefits. Ford took the $200,000 figure for the cost of a death from a study of the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration, which used the estimates in the table on the previous page.
In order to meet strong competition from Volkswagen as well as other foreign domes- tic subcompacts, Lee Iacocca, then president of Ford Motor Co., decided to introduce a new vehicle by 1970, to be known as the Pinto. The overall objective was to produce a car at or below 2,000 pounds with a price tag of $2,000 or less. Although preproduction design and testing normally requires about three and a half years and the arrangement of actual production somewhat longer, design was started in 1968 and production commenced in 1970.
The Pinto project was overseen by Robert Alexander, vice president of car engineering, and was approved by Ford’s Product Planning Committee, consisting of Iacocca, Alexander, and Ford’s group vice president of car engineering, Harold MacDonald. The engineers throughout Ford who worked on the project “signed off ” to their immediate supervisors, who did likewise in turn to their superiors and so on to Alexander and MacDonald and, finally, Iacocca.
Many reports were passed up the chain of command during the design and approval process, including several outlining the results of crash tests and a proposal to remedy the tendency for the car to burst into flames when rear-ended at twenty-one miles per hour. This tendency was caused by the placement of the car’s gas tank between the rear axle and the rear bumper such that a rear-end collision was likely to drive the gas tank forward to rupture on a flange and bolts on a rear axle housing for the differential. The ruptured tank would then spew gas into the passenger compart- ment to be ignited immediately by sparks or a hot exhaust system.
The remedies available to Ford included mounting the gas tank above the rear axle, which would cut down on trunk space, or installing a rubber bladder in the gas tank. Ford experimented with the installation of 
rubber bladders but apparently decided they were not cost effective. Later, as part of a successful lobby effort against government regulations for mandatory crash tests (crash tests were delayed eight years, until 1977), Ford’s cost–benefit analysis came to light in a company study titled “Fatalities Associated with Crash-Induced Fuel Leakage and Fires.” As the details previously outlined show, the costs of installing the rubber blad- der vastly exceeded the benefits.
Ford took the $200,000 figure for the cost of a death from a study of the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration, which used the estimates in the table on the previous page.
Questions
1. Was the decision not to install the rubber bladder appropriate? Use the 5-question framework to support your analysis.
2. What faults can you identify in Ford’s cost–benefit analysis?
3. Should Ford have given its Pinto customers the option to have the rubber bladder installed during production for, say, $20?

Questions 1. Was the decision not to install the rubber bladder appropriate? Use the 5-question framework to support your analysis. 2. What faults can you identify in Ford’s cost–benefit analysis? 3. Should Ford have given its Pinto customers the option to have the rubber bladder installed during production for, say, $20?


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> Why is it important for the clients of professional accountants to be ethical?

> Why might ethical corporate behavior lead to higher profitability?

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2.99

See Answer