Reference no: EM133022946
Question - You are an accountant in the budgetary, projections, and special projects department of Fentick Conductor, Inc., a large manufacturing company. The president, Carlos Jones, asks you on very short notice to prepare some sales and income projections covering the next 2 years of the company's much heralded new product lines. He wants these projections for a series of speeches he is making while on a 2-week trip to eight West Coast brokerage firms. The president hopes to bolster Fentick's stock sales and price.
You work 23 hours in 2 days to compile the projections, hand-deliver them to the president, and are swiftly but graciously thanked as he departs. A week later, you find time to go over some of your computations and discover a miscalculation that makes projections grossly overstated. You quickly inquire about the president's itinerary and learn that he has made half of his speeches and has half yet to make. You are in a quandary about what to do (Weygandt et al., 2021, p. 24-50).
Reference - Weygandt, J. J., Kimmel, P. D., & Mitchell, J. E. (2021). Accounting principles (14th ed.). Wiley.
-What are the consequences of telling the president of your gross miscalculations?
-What are the consequences of not telling the president of your gross miscalculations?
-What are the ethical considerations for you and the president in this situation?
-Which code of conduct principle would you act on from the professional codes of conduct guiding ethical behavior in this field? Provide the organization's name, and the code of conduct which pertains to why you act, and then provide the url for your source.
-Based on your chosen code of conduct principle(s), what would you do (step-by-step) to act in accordance with your chosen principle to address this situation?