The role of costs, benefits, and moral judgments in private-to-private corruption
Autor: | Krista Jaakson, Maaja Vadi, Gaygysyz Ashyrov, Anne Reino, Mari-Liis Sööt, Karin Hilmer Pedersen, Lars Johannsen |
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Rok vydání: | 2018 |
Předmět: |
MANAGERS
ORGANIZATIONS Corruption MARKET COMPETITION media_common.quotation_subject 0211 other engineering and technologies Corporate crime Context (language use) Rationality 02 engineering and technology Pathology and Forensic Medicine Line of business 0505 law media_common 021110 strategic defence & security studies Corrupt practices Public economics BRIBERY 05 social sciences General Social Sciences Rational choice theory Private sector ISOMORPHISM BUSINESS RATIONAL-CHOICE CULTURAL-VALUES FIRM 050501 criminology DEPLETION Law |
Zdroj: | Jaakson, K, Johannsen, L, Pedersen, K H, Vadi, M, Ashyrov, G, Reino, A & Sööt, M-L 2019, ' The role of costs, benefits, and moral judgments in private-to-private corruption ', Crime, Law and Social Change, vol. 71, no. 1, pp. 83-106 . https://doi.org/10.1007/s10611-018-9790-y |
ISSN: | 1573-0751 0925-4994 |
DOI: | 10.1007/s10611-018-9790-y |
Popis: | Private-to-private corruption has no direct victim and is therefore difficult to combat. Yet it undermines market competition, impedes growth, and sets development at risk. Therefore, knowledge about the reasons for committing crimes is necessary for changing corrupt practices within private sector. This article explores business managers’ perceptions of the extent of bribing within their lines of business and possible explanations for these perceptions. We analyze a survey of 1000 managers of private companies in Denmark and Estonia using structural equation models. Comparing two behavioral causes for bribes, a rational choice theory and a cognitivist theory of action, which adds moral judgment to instrumental rationality, we find that managers find corruption less common when they see it as a breach of their own moral judgment. Costs of bribing do not matter and benefits from bribing play a marginal role in the perceived extent of bribing. Context is also important: managers in Denmark and outside capital cities in both countries deem bribing less common and this is not because they are personally less tolerant of bribing. The implication of this study is that fostering condemnatory attitudes toward private-to-private corruption should be a standard act in combating this form of corporate crime. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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