Authors
Xiaolan Zheng, Sadok El Ghoul, Omrane Guedhami, Chuck CY Kwok
Publication date
2013/5/1
Journal
Journal of International Business Studies
Volume
44
Pages
363-390
Publisher
Palgrave Macmillan UK
Description
This paper examines how national culture, and collectivism in particular, influences corruption in bank lending. We hypothesize that interdependent self-construal and particularist norms in collectivist countries lead to a higher level of lending corruption through their influence both on the interactions between bank officers and bank customers and on the dynamics among bank colleagues. Using a sample covering 3835 firms across 38 countries, we find strong evidence that firms domiciled in collectivist countries perceive a higher level of lending corruption than firms domiciled in individualist countries. In terms of economic magnitude, the effect of collectivism is substantially larger than the effects of other cultural dimensions (uncertainty avoidance, masculinity, and power distance) and institutional factors identified in prior studies (bank supervision, bank competition, information sharing, and media …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
X Zheng, SE Ghoul, O Guedhami, CCY Kwok - Journal of International Business Studies, 2013