Keywords
bribery and corruption, unethical business behavior, institutional constraints, organizational isomorphism, national business system
Abstract
Motivated by the prevalence and persistence of corruption in Sub-Saharan Africa (SSA) despite high-profile anticorruption efforts, and by calls for more research on unethical organizational behavior by firms in Africa, we investigated the link between bribery in 12 SSA countries and the phenomenon of organizational isomorphism, long used to explain legitimate, but rarely, illegitimate firm practices. Analysis of 5989 SSA firms in three distinct industries known for high levels of bribery reveals direct positive relationships between bribery and its perception as frequently practiced in specific industries (“mimetic isomorphic effect”); institutional constraints on businesses (“coercive isomorphic effect”); and local market rivalry (“competitive isomorphic effect”). Institutional coercion is the strongest determinant of bribery, while imitation and competitive rivalry routinize the practice. However, the effect of isomorphic pressures on bribery practices varies across industries. Therefore, institutional redesigns, policy remediations and managerial actions to mitigate bribery must consider the crossindustry variations.
Original Publication Citation
Ufere, N., Gaskin, J., Perelli, S., Somers, A., & Boland, R. (2020). Why is bribery pervasive among firms in sub-Saharan African countries? Multi-industry empirical evidence of organizational isomorphism. Journal of Business Research, 108, 92-104.
BYU ScholarsArchive Citation
Ufere, Nnaoke; Gaskin, James; Perelli, Sheri; Somers, Antoinette; and Boland, Richard Jr., "Why is Bribery Pervasive Among Firms in Sub-Saharan African Countries? Multi-industry Empirical Evidence of Organizational Isomorphism" (2020). Faculty Publications. 9389.
https://scholarsarchive.byu.edu/facpub/9389
Document Type
Peer-Reviewed Article
Publication Date
2020
Publisher
Journal of Business Research
Language
English
College
Marriott School of Business
Department
Information Systems Management
Copyright Status
© 2019 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
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