Ethical ideology and fraud rationalization among future accountants in Nigeria

Research Article

Ethical ideology and fraud rationalization among future accountants in Nigeria

Published in: Africa Journal of Management
Volume 10 , issue 3 , 2024 , pages: 383–406
DOI: 10.1080/23322373.2024.2375947
Author(s): Collins Sankay Oboh University of Lagos, Nigeria , Peter Sproat TaxWatch, United Kingdom

Abstract

This study examines the effect of ethical ideology on fraud rationalization among future accountants in Nigeria. Specifically, it investigates whether being a moral idealist or moral relativist influences the ability of future accountants to rationalize fraud. The study collected data from 225 participants with a scenario-based questionnaire, which was analysed using independent sample t-tests and regression estimation techniques. The results reveal a direct correlation between ethical ideology and fraud rationalization, indicating that future accountants who are high in moral relativism and low in moral idealism have higher tendencies to rationalize fraud than those who are high in moral idealism and low in moral relativism. These findings emphasize the importance of ethical ideology as an intrinsic psychological mechanism that can predict fraud rationalization tendencies in individuals. The study highlights the important implications of its findings and provides suggestions for future research.

Get new issue alerts for Africa Journal of Management