Auditor's ethical judgments: The influence of moral intensity, ethical orientation and client importance

This study examined auditors' ethical judgments using two theoretical perspectives; (1) Moral intensity constructs of Jones' (1991) Model and (2) Forsyth's (1980) framework of individual ethical orientation. The importance of the moral issues and how they affected the auditors' e...

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Published in:International Journal of Financial Research
Main Author: Johari R.J.; Sanusi Z.M.; Zarefar A.
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Sciedu Press 2019
Online Access:https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85065970242&doi=10.5430%2fijfr.v10n3p77&partnerID=40&md5=373d5d0aab49b332bf10937a7c0d1bb1
id 2-s2.0-85065970242
spelling 2-s2.0-85065970242
Johari R.J.; Sanusi Z.M.; Zarefar A.
Auditor's ethical judgments: The influence of moral intensity, ethical orientation and client importance
2019
International Journal of Financial Research
10
3
10.5430/ijfr.v10n3p77
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85065970242&doi=10.5430%2fijfr.v10n3p77&partnerID=40&md5=373d5d0aab49b332bf10937a7c0d1bb1
This study examined auditors' ethical judgments using two theoretical perspectives; (1) Moral intensity constructs of Jones' (1991) Model and (2) Forsyth's (1980) framework of individual ethical orientation. The importance of the moral issues and how they affected the auditors' ethical judgments together with the influence of individual's ethical orientation and the client importance is discussed. A research instrument consisted of two scenarios with different level of moral intensity issues and utilized a 12-item of moral intensity measurement and a Forsyth's (1980) scale to measure ethical orientation along two dimensions, idealism and relativism. The client importance is manipulated in this between-subjects study. The results of 152 auditors' found that the effects of the moral intensity construct and the client importance on auditors' ethical judgments is different based on the issues intensity level of the scenarios. Whereas, both dimensions of the individual ethical orientation (idealism and relativism) are found significant in both of the scenarios tested. The limitations of the study and recommendation for future studies are also discussed. © Sciedu Press.
Sciedu Press
19234023
English
Article
All Open Access; Gold Open Access
author Johari R.J.; Sanusi Z.M.; Zarefar A.
spellingShingle Johari R.J.; Sanusi Z.M.; Zarefar A.
Auditor's ethical judgments: The influence of moral intensity, ethical orientation and client importance
author_facet Johari R.J.; Sanusi Z.M.; Zarefar A.
author_sort Johari R.J.; Sanusi Z.M.; Zarefar A.
title Auditor's ethical judgments: The influence of moral intensity, ethical orientation and client importance
title_short Auditor's ethical judgments: The influence of moral intensity, ethical orientation and client importance
title_full Auditor's ethical judgments: The influence of moral intensity, ethical orientation and client importance
title_fullStr Auditor's ethical judgments: The influence of moral intensity, ethical orientation and client importance
title_full_unstemmed Auditor's ethical judgments: The influence of moral intensity, ethical orientation and client importance
title_sort Auditor's ethical judgments: The influence of moral intensity, ethical orientation and client importance
publishDate 2019
container_title International Journal of Financial Research
container_volume 10
container_issue 3
doi_str_mv 10.5430/ijfr.v10n3p77
url https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85065970242&doi=10.5430%2fijfr.v10n3p77&partnerID=40&md5=373d5d0aab49b332bf10937a7c0d1bb1
description This study examined auditors' ethical judgments using two theoretical perspectives; (1) Moral intensity constructs of Jones' (1991) Model and (2) Forsyth's (1980) framework of individual ethical orientation. The importance of the moral issues and how they affected the auditors' ethical judgments together with the influence of individual's ethical orientation and the client importance is discussed. A research instrument consisted of two scenarios with different level of moral intensity issues and utilized a 12-item of moral intensity measurement and a Forsyth's (1980) scale to measure ethical orientation along two dimensions, idealism and relativism. The client importance is manipulated in this between-subjects study. The results of 152 auditors' found that the effects of the moral intensity construct and the client importance on auditors' ethical judgments is different based on the issues intensity level of the scenarios. Whereas, both dimensions of the individual ethical orientation (idealism and relativism) are found significant in both of the scenarios tested. The limitations of the study and recommendation for future studies are also discussed. © Sciedu Press.
publisher Sciedu Press
issn 19234023
language English
format Article
accesstype All Open Access; Gold Open Access
record_format scopus
collection Scopus
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