Ethical Decision-Making: An Interactive Model Of Organizations’ Ethics Systems And Decision-Makers’ Financial Situation.

Abstract

Purpose – This study aims to investigate the influence of two perceived organizational ethics systems (perceived ethics training quality and integrity-based climate) on the ethical decision-making (EDM) of tax accountants in Ghana. The study also examines the moderating role of the decision-makers’ financial situation on the quality ethics training–EDM relationship. Design/methodology/approach – Survey data from 356 tax accountants were analyzed using the partial least squares structural equation modeling technique. Findings – The results show that the two ethics systems influence EDM, but their extent of influence varies across the stages of EDM. Specifically, quality ethics training is a better predictor of EDM at the ethical issue recognition stage, whereas integrity-based climate is a better predictor of EDM at the ethical intention stage. The study also found that decision-makers’ financial situation predicts the ethical recognition stage of EDM but does not moderate the quality ethics training–EDM relationship. Practical implications – This study recommends the concurrent deployment of quality ethics training and an integrity-based work climate to improve ethical behavior. Policymakers should also emphasize a work climate that promotes honesty, conscientiousness and ethical principles (integrity-based climate) to improve ethical intentions.

Description

Research Article

Citation

Kportorgbi, H. K., Aboagye-Otchere, F., & Kwakye, T. O. (2025). Ethical decision-making: an interactive model of organizations’ ethics systems and decision-makers’ financial situation. Journal of Global Responsibility, 16(2), 225-244.

Endorsement

Review

Supplemented By

Referenced By