TY - JOUR
T1 - The influence of organisational culture on corporate accountants' ethical judgement and ethical intention in Vietnam
AU - Nguyen, Lan Anh
AU - Dellaportas, Steven
AU - Vesty, Gillian Maree
AU - Pham, Van Anh Thi
AU - Jandug, Lilibeth
AU - Tsahuridu, Eva
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2021, Emerald Publishing Limited.
PY - 2022/2/3
Y1 - 2022/2/3
N2 - Purpose: This research examines the impact of organisational culture on the ethical judgement and ethical intention of corporate accountants in Vietnam. Design/methodology/approach: The study relies on survey data collected from 283 practising accountants in Vietnam. Organisational culture was measured using the Organisational Culture Assessment Instrument, developed by Cameron and Quinn (2011). The Instrument is developed based on the competing values framework comprised of four distinct cultures: clan, hierarchy, market and adhocracy. Ethical judgement and ethical intention were measured based on respondent responses to five ethical scenarios, each linked to a principle of professional conduct in the code of ethics. Findings: The findings indicate that the clan culture (family oriented) is dominant and has a significant positive influence on accountants' ethical judgement and ethical intention. Respondents in the clan culture evaluate scenarios more ethically compared with accountants in the adhocracy and market cultures but not the hierarchy culture. Accountants who emphasise the adhocracy and market cultures display a more relaxed attitude towards unethical scenarios whereas respondents in the hierarchy culture (rule oriented) display the highest ethical attitude. Research limitations/implications: The code of ethics, its content and how it is interpreted and applied may differ between professions, organisations or cultures. Originality/value: Organisational research on ethical decision-making is ample but few studies link organisational culture with ethical judgement and ethical intention from the perspective of individual accountants.
AB - Purpose: This research examines the impact of organisational culture on the ethical judgement and ethical intention of corporate accountants in Vietnam. Design/methodology/approach: The study relies on survey data collected from 283 practising accountants in Vietnam. Organisational culture was measured using the Organisational Culture Assessment Instrument, developed by Cameron and Quinn (2011). The Instrument is developed based on the competing values framework comprised of four distinct cultures: clan, hierarchy, market and adhocracy. Ethical judgement and ethical intention were measured based on respondent responses to five ethical scenarios, each linked to a principle of professional conduct in the code of ethics. Findings: The findings indicate that the clan culture (family oriented) is dominant and has a significant positive influence on accountants' ethical judgement and ethical intention. Respondents in the clan culture evaluate scenarios more ethically compared with accountants in the adhocracy and market cultures but not the hierarchy culture. Accountants who emphasise the adhocracy and market cultures display a more relaxed attitude towards unethical scenarios whereas respondents in the hierarchy culture (rule oriented) display the highest ethical attitude. Research limitations/implications: The code of ethics, its content and how it is interpreted and applied may differ between professions, organisations or cultures. Originality/value: Organisational research on ethical decision-making is ample but few studies link organisational culture with ethical judgement and ethical intention from the perspective of individual accountants.
KW - Code of ethics
KW - Ethical decision-making
KW - Ethical intention
KW - Ethical judgement
KW - Organisational culture
KW - Vietnam
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85107480026&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1108/AAAJ-05-2020-4573
DO - 10.1108/AAAJ-05-2020-4573
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85107480026
SN - 0951-3574
VL - 35
SP - 325
EP - 354
JO - Accounting, Auditing & Accountability Journal
JF - Accounting, Auditing & Accountability Journal
IS - 2
ER -