The culpability of accounting practice in promoting bribery and corruption in developing countries

Date

2017-01-24

Advisors

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

ISSN

2041-8698
2041-868X

Volume Title

Publisher

Inderscience Online

Type

Article

Peer reviewed

Yes

Abstract

Bribery and corruption are increasing in the developing countries. It has been estimated that some $400 billion of bribe is paid to political elite in developing countries. Such huge amounts of money cannot be successfully executed without the active involvement of multinational companies (MNCs) from the Western countries. This paper examines the processes involved in the misapplication of accounting practice from the perspective of anti-social criminal practices. It analyses the implication of accounting practice in the construction of MNCs bribery and corruption activities. The paper locates MNCs enterprise culture and accounting practice within the broader dynamics of global capitalism to argue that the drive for higher profit at almost any cost is not constrained by accounting rules, laws and even periodic regulatory actions. The paper uses publicly available evidence to illuminate the role of accounting technology in concealing and facilitates MNCs corrupt practices in developing countries. Evidence is provided to show that to secure and retain business in developing countries and to gain competitive advantages MNCs have engaged in bribery and corruption. The paper also makes suggestions for reform.

Description

The file attached to this record is the author's final peer reviewed version. The Publisher's final version can be found by following the DOI link.

Keywords

accounting, bribery, corruption, multinational companies, developing countries, transparency, accountability

Citation

AHMAD KHAIR, A.H., OTUSANYA, J. and LAUWO, S. (2017) The Culpability of Accounting Practice in Promoting Bribery and Corruption in Developing Countries. International Journal of Economics and Accounting, 8(2).

Rights

Research Institute