Accountants and Their Conduct: Implications of Behavioral Ethics
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Transcript of Accountants and Their Conduct: Implications of Behavioral Ethics
Accountants and Their Conduct: Implications of Behavioral Ethics
December 5, 2013Robert Prentice
Let’s start with a little survey…
A quick quiz:
Question #1:
I have solid, well-considered ethical beliefs that can be changed only by reasoned arguments or new evidence.
___True___ False
Question #2:
I have character and integrity that will carry me through difficult situations and hard choices.
___ True___ False
Good News: You’re not as unethical as you
could be…
How many of you stole candy from a baby this
week?
How many of you took an opportunity to mug a
little old lady?
Bad News: You are not as ethical as you think
you are.
We are all Lance Armstrong…sort of.
Humility
The McGurk Effect
Optical Illusions
There are even tactile illusions…
A quick quiz:
Question #1:
I have solid, well-considered ethical beliefs that can be changed only by reasoned arguments or new evidence.
___True___ False
A quick quiz:
Question #1:
I have solid, well-considered ethical beliefs that can be changed only by reasoned arguments or new evidence.
___True_X_ False
Question #2:
I have character and integrity that will carry me through difficult situations and hard choices.
___ True___ False
Question #2:
I have character and integrity that will carry me through difficult situations and hard choices.
___ True_X_ False
If there is one overwhelming finding in
behavioral ethics research over the past decade, it is this:
If there is one overwhelming finding in
behavioral ethics research over the past decade, it is this:
Most people (including accountants) want to and do think of themselves as good people
80% or so of people believe themselves to be
more moral than their peers 92% of Americans are satisfied with their
moral character A higher percentage of people believe they
themselves will get into heaven than that Mother Theresa did.
Most people (including accountants) want to
and do think of themselves as good people Most people (including accountants)
frequently act unethically, usually in minor ways
Most people want to and do think of
themselves as good people Most people frequently act unethically,
usually in minor ways Our accomplice:
Moral Beliefs and Attitudes:
10---9---8---7---6---5---4---3---2---1 VeryEthical
Very Un-ethical
Moral Beliefs and Attitudes:
1) Self-Interest
Your views on the morality of homosexual
conduct might well change if your son comes out of the closet….
“Rob Portman Supports Same-Sex Marriage After Learning Son Is Gay”
Senator Rob Portman, (R)-Ohio
Your views on the morality of premarital sex might change if your teenage daughter got pregnant…
2) Emotional Reaction
Disgust
10---9---8---7---6---5---4---3---2---1 Very Ethical
Very Unethical
Frank is on a footbridge over the trolley tracks. He knows trolleys and can
see that the one approaching the bridge is out of control, with its conductor passed out. On the track under the bridge, there are five people; the banks are so steep that they will not be able to get off the track in time. Frank knows that the only way to stop an out-of-control trolley is to drop a very heavy weight into its path. But the only available, sufficiently heavy weight is a large person also watching the trolley from the footbridge. Frank can save the five by shoving the large person onto the track in the path of the trolley, resulting in his death; or he can refrain from doing this, letting the five die. Is it morally permissible for Frank to push the large person onto the tracks?
Bottom Line: Our moral views are not as fixed as we think.
Moral Actions
Most of us (including accountants) believe that we have rock solid character that leads us to act morally….
Most people (including accountants) are largely
unaware of factors that cause good people to do bad things:
Cognitive errors Social pressures Organizational pressures Other environmental factors
Fundamental Attribution Error:
Underweight situational factors in others Overweight them in ourselves
Let’s Talk About Some of those Factors
1) Transparency
“Integrity is living your valueseven when no one is looking.”
1) Transparency
1) Transparency
2) The Self-Serving Bias
a. Affects how we collect, process, and even remember information.
i. Collect
“The speeches I drafted … were composed of facts filtered from the stacks of reports and intelligence that daily hit my desk. As I read these reports, facts and judgments that contradicted the British version of events would almost literally fade into nothingness. Facts that reinforced our narrative would stand out to me almost as if highlighted, to be later deployed by me, my ambassador and my ministers like hand grenades in the diplomatic trench warfare.”
ii. Process
i. Football game
ii. Capital punishment
iii. Remember
b. People respond to incentives, even if unconsciously.
i. The more at stake; the more we respond. Earning Management
b. People respond to incentives, even if unconsciously.
i. The more at stake; the more we respond.
ii. David Duncan & Enron
c. We are often unaware of how we are impacted.
i. Doctors & Drug Companies
Affects others: 61%
Affects me: 16%
d. Numerous studies show that accountants are affected by the self-serving bias, like everyone else, but they also tend not to believe it:
i. In 2000, a top AICPA official testified before the SEC, saying:
“We are professionals that practice by the highest moral standards. We would never be influenced by our own personal financial well being.”
ii. “Ethical decisions are biased by a stubborn view of oneself as moral, competent, and deserving, and thus, not susceptible to conflicts of interest. … An ethical blind spot emerges as decision makers … assume that conflicts of interest are nonissues.” [Chugh et al.]
Dolly Chugh,NYU
3. Obedience to Authoritya. Milgram study
3) Obedience to Authoritya. Milgram study
b. Auditors Who Know What Boss Wants
4) Conformity Biasa. Asch Study
Solomon Asch
4) Conformity Biasa. Asch Study
b. Betty Vinson of WorldCom
4) Conformity Biasa. Asch Study
b. Betty Vinson of WorldCom
c. KPMG: “You’re either on the team or off the team”
Consider:ABC Drug Company’s most profitable drug, its
internal studies indicate, causes 14-22 “unnecessary” deaths a year. Competitors offer a safe medication with the same benefits at the same price. If regulators knew of the internal study, they would ban sale of the drug.
Is it ethical for ABC to continue to sell the drug?
When asked to assume the role of directors of ABC, 100% of 57 groups said that ABC should continue to sell.
5) Incrementalism.
a. The slippery slopeb. Abu Ghraib
“But after four or five nights of running the M.I. block of the Abu Ghraib hard site, Davis said, “I just wanted to go home.” He felt that what he did and saw there was wrong. “But it was reaffirmed and reassured through the leadership: We’re at war. This is Military Intelligence. This is what they do. And it’s just a job,” he said. “So, over time, you become numb to it, and it’s nothing. It just became the norm. You see it—that sucks. It sucks to be him. And that’s it. You move on.”
“In the beginning,” [Sabrina Harman] said, “you see somebody naked and you see underwear on their head an you’re like, ‘Oh, that’s pretty bad—I can’t believe I just saw that.’ and then you go to bed and you come back the next day and you see something worse. Well, it seems like the day before wasn’t so bad.”
c. Enron CAO Rick Causey, a UT graduate, needed to do a deal to disguise a delay in recording losses. An executive balked.
Causey: “Is it possible the deal is still alive?”Exec: “No.”Causey: “So there’s no chance of it coming
back?”Exec: “No”Causey: “Is there even a little bit of a chance of
it coming back?”Finally, the exec took the hint and the deal was
declared “undead”.
The exec later said:
“You did it once, it smelled bad. You did it again, it didn’t smell bad.”
Re-cap:
It’s hard for us to believe that we could screw up the way infamous white collar criminals have done, because we feel we are good people.
But they felt they were good people, too.
Other factors:6) Framing7) Loss Aversion8)Tangible & Abstract
Free ethics video series brought to you by
McCombs:
http://ethicsunwrapped.utexas.edu/
Cara Biasucci,Film Maker
DeSteno & Valdesolo: “Morality, contrary to
popular belief, can’t be controlled simply by strength of will and reason.”
Implications for IESBA:
1) Codes of Professional Conduct are a Good Idea for Several Reasons:
1) Codes of Conduct are a Good Idea for Several Reasons:
a. Their existence and required training can help keep ethics in accountants’ frame of reference:
i) Cheating Studyii) Expense Report Study
b. They typically reduce conflicts of interest.
i) Important because accountants tend not to believe they are susceptible, just like everyone else
c. They help hold people accountable.
i) Haidt says: “…the most important principle for designing an ethical society is to make sure that everyone’s reputation is on the line all the time, so that bad behavior will always bring bad consequences.”
Jon HaidtNYU
The End.
Thanks for your time.