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Contribution Details

Type Working Paper
Scope Discipline-based scholarship
Title Moral commitment and corruption: Who is more likely to resist corrupt behavior?
Organization Unit
Authors
  • Stefan Linder
  • Matthias Sohn
  • Carmen Tanner
Language
  • English
Institution University of Zurich
Series Name SSRN
Number 3530305
ISSN 1556-5068
Number of Pages 42
Date 2020
Abstract Text Corruption is ubiquitous in practice and has severe negative consequences for businesses and societies at large. This paper focuses on an issue largely neglected in research on corruption: why individuals differ in their susceptibility to engage in corruption. Drawing on a laboratory experiment, we propose that individuals high in moral commitment are less likely to engage in corruptive behaviors and hence forego financial benefits. Specifically, we posit that individuals refrain from corruption (i) the more they hold integrity as a protected value, (ii) the more they experience compromising their integrity for monetary gains as unacceptable, and (iii) the higher their level of Honesty-Humility. The results of our two-step experiment largely support the hypotheses: people who treat compromises to integrity as unacceptable were less willing to accept bribes, and Honesty-Humility decreased bribe-giving. The findings are robust to demographic variables (e.g., age, gender, cultural background) and additional personal characteristics (e.g., risk tolerance, dispositional greed) and have important implications for ongoing theory-building efforts and business practice.
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Official URL https://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=3530305
Other Identification Number merlin-id:20139
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