Ethical perceptions of Asian managers: evidence of trends in six divergent national contexts

Authors: Chatterjee S.R.1; Pearson C.A.L.2

Source: Business Ethics, A European Review, Volume 12, Number 2, April 2003 , pp. 203-211(9)

Publisher: Wiley-Blackwell

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Abstract:

Global link building is having a substantial impact in every sphere of Asian managerial activity. The economic upheavals of the Asian ?nancial crisis have cast a long shadow, and ethical clarity has become a social issue. For instance, corporate performance in terms of long-term survival, growth and global competency is seen to depend to a considerable extent upon the ethical infrastructur of managers and emerging managerial culture in Asia. One ?eld in which Asian managers and their managerial practices are often considered weak is the area of ethical clarity. Corporate managerial leaders in Asia need to develop new responses to the ethical complexities arising out of the increasing global interfaces. In spite of a growing awareness of the importance of ethical centrality in an intensely competitive international business arena, very little empirical work has been conducted to strengthen the relevant management literatures. The purpose of the research reported in this paper was to examine the perceptions of ethical probity among managers in six Asian countries. The results of the study indicate interesting convergences and divergences across countries and organisational demographies. The ?ndings lead to observations of the apparent similarities of ethical conceptualisation in global, societal and often in the organisational arena while revealing noticeable divergences in the domain of individual ethical perceptions.

Document Type: Research article

DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/1467-8608.00319

Affiliations: 1: Curtin University of Technology, Perth 2: Murdoch University, Perth

Publication date: 2003-04-01

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