
Abstract
Read this article on how a leader's influence can encourage ethical or unethical behaviors in organizations. The study sought to understand the dual effect of leaders who make ethical choices versus leaders that make unethical choices and how it affects employee decision-making.
We use a lab experiment to examine whether and how leaders influence
workers' (un)ethical behavior through financial reporting choices. We
randomly assign the role of leaders or workers to subjects, who can
choose to report an outcome via automatic or self-reporting.
Self-reporting allows for profitable and undetectable earnings
manipulation. We vary the leaders' ability to choose the reporting
method and to punish workers. We show that workers are more likely to
choose automatic reporting when their leader voluntarily does so and can
assign punishment. Even workers who choose self-reporting tend to cheat
less when their leader chooses automatic reporting. Nonetheless, most
leaders do not opt for automatic reporting in the first place: they
often choose self-reporting and punish workers who rather choose
automatic reporting. Collectively, our results reveal a dual effect of
leadership on ethical behaviors in organizations: workers behave more
ethically if their leader makes ethical choices, but often leaders do
not make ethical choices in the first place. Hence, leading by example
can backfire.
Source: Mario Daniele Amore, Orsola Garofalo, and Alice Guerra, https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s10551-022-05088-z
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.