Abstract:
The ethical issues in the construction companies are becoming the major parameters that
affect the performance of the projects and even the survival of the company itself. The
severity of undesirable effect of ethical matters such as corruption has been found to be
heavy on the construction industry of sub Saharan Africa that comprises Ethiopia. This
study, is on assessment of professional practice in construction companies in Jimma,
Oromia, which aimed to evaluate the ethical practice in the construction companies by
evaluating the ethical trends, frameworks and challenges, identifying the major ethical
practices with their root triggering factors and outcomes, and investigating the ethical
practice with respect to the professional code of ethics of the civil engineers.
The study employed descriptive qualitative research approaches in data collection and
analysis. The samples were determined by purposive sampling technique (non-probability
sampling) from all construction companies in the city and then the samples were
categorized in two groups: managers and professionals for data collection in which in- depth and structured interviews delivered respectively for the two sample groups. The
interview questions were systematically designed based on the Consequence-Principle- Virtue/ CPV, Knowledge-Attitude-Practice/ KAP, and Code models, as well as qualitative
validity and reliability test was done to meet the objectives of the study. The data were
analyzed qualitatively majorly through thematic analysis and coding, including statistical
presentation tools (tables, graphs, etc.) to the sake of demonstrating the qualitative
results.
The findings of this study indicated that ethical practice trend was in a low level. The
frameworks of the companies for ethical practice is poor. There major challenges were
less emphasis given to ethics, poor government, contradiction between market and ethics,
and colleagues’ pressure to commit corruption. The major unethical practices were
bribery and theft followed by hiding quality defects, non-receipt procurement, nepotism
and favoritism, fraud in recites and documents, discrimination, theft and fraud, and
coercion. These unethical practices were triggered majorly by high price of local
construction materials, burdened bid process and unfair tax, and poor management
support to employees (lack of ethical education & training) in the study area. The major
outcomes of these unethical practices were low performance and damaged company
reputation. The obedience to code of professional ethics/ CoE found to be low in
construction companies in Jimma. The recommendation forwarded for construction
companies and concerning governmental sectors by this study were establishing a
rewarding system to practitioners for their good ethical practices; encouraging the
construction companies to incorporate appropriate frameworks for ethical issues in their
strategies; designing policy and system to distribute the EACE CoE book, monitor the
implementation, and evaluate/ audit the company’s ethical status; setting a mandatory
training and certification requirement of construction managers and professionals