Ethical evaluations and behavioural intentions of early career accountants : the impact of mentors, peers and individual attributes
journal contribution
posted on 2009-01-01, 00:00authored byL McManus, Navaneetham Subramaniam
This study examined how mentoring support, peer influence and individual attributes of early career accountants (ECA) influence their ethical evaluations and behavioural intentions. Respondents indicate that their evaluation of the seriousness of the ethical conflict is affected by the perceived standard of ethical conduct of their peers, their personal ethical orientation, the extent of ethics education at university, and gender. ECAs' evaluation of a senior colleague's unethical behaviour is affected by mentoring support and the perceived standard of ethical conduct of peers. In terms of ECAs' willingness to contact accounting professional bodies for ethical advice, the size of the accounting firm and the extent of their ethics education at university are significant factors. Furthermore, the likelihood of respondents choosing a more ethical decision is correlated with his or her individual ethical orientation and the extent of ethics education at university.
History
Journal
Accounting and finance
Volume
49
Pagination
619 - 643
Location
Clayton, Vic.
ISSN
0810-5391
eISSN
1467-629X
Language
eng
Publication classification
C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal
Copyright notice
2009, Accounting and Finance Association of Australia and New Zealand