Banking culture breeds dishonesty,
scientific study finds
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[November 22, 2014]
By Kate Kelland
LONDON (Reuters) - - A banking culture
that implicitly puts financial gain above all else fuels greed and
dishonesty and makes bankers more likely to cheat, according to the
findings of a scientific study.
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Researchers in Switzerland studied bank workers and other
professionals in experiments in which they won more money if they
cheated, and found that bankers were more dishonest when they were
made particularly aware of their professional role.
When bank employees were primed to think less about their profession
and more about normal life, however, they were less inclined to
dishonesty.
"Many scandals... have plagued the financial industry in the last
decade," Ernst Fehr, a researcher at the University of Zurich who
co-led the study, told reporters in a telephone briefing. "These
scandals raise the question whether the business culture in the
banking industry is favoring, or at least tolerating, fraudulent or
unethical behaviors."
Fehr's team conducted a laboratory game with bankers, then repeated
it with other types of workers as comparisons.
The first study involved 128 employees all levels of a large
international bank - the researchers were sworn to secrecy about
which one - and 80 staff from a range of other banks.
Participants were divided into a treatment group that answered
questions about their profession, such as "what is your function at
this bank;" or a control group that answered questions unrelated to
work, such as "how many hours of TV do you watch each week?"
They were then asked to toss a coin 10 times, unobserved, and report
the results. For each toss they knew whether heads or tails would
yield a $20 reward. They were told they could keep their winnings if
they were more than or equal to those of a randomly selected subject
from a pilot study.
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Given maximum winnings of $200, there was "a considerable incentive
to cheat," Fehr's team wrote in the journal Nature, online November
19.
The results showed the control group reported 51.6% winning tosses
and the treatment group - whose banking identity had been emphasized
to them - reported 58.2% as wins, giving a misrepresentation rate of
16%. The proportion of subjects cheating was 26%.
The same experiments with employees in other sectors - including
manufacturing, telecoms and pharmaceuticals - showed they don't
become more dishonest when their professional identity or
banking-related information is emphasized.
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