How chinese auditors' relativistic ethical orientations influence their love of money

Love of Money (LMOS) theory is well developed and widely used in studying people's beliefs about money (Luna-Arocas & Tang2004). This study examines the views of 612 Chinese auditors and establishes that the ideological positions adopted influence how they regard money and that these positi...

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Main Authors: Woodbine, Gordon, Fan, Ying, Scully, Glennda
Format: Journal Article
Published: Business and Organization Ethics Network (BON) 2013
Online Access:http://ejbo.jyu.fi/pdf/ejbo_vol18_no2_pages_20-29.pdf
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/12430
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author Woodbine, Gordon
Fan, Ying
Scully, Glennda
author_facet Woodbine, Gordon
Fan, Ying
Scully, Glennda
author_sort Woodbine, Gordon
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description Love of Money (LMOS) theory is well developed and widely used in studying people's beliefs about money (Luna-Arocas & Tang2004). This study examines the views of 612 Chinese auditors and establishes that the ideological positions adopted influence how they regard money and that these positions are related to underlying cultural norms. Forsyth's (1980) EPQis used to establish a viable model, which establishes that relativism strongly influences Chinese auditors" attitudes towards money and has important implications in terms of the impact on the accounting profession in that rapidly growing nation.
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institution Curtin University Malaysia
institution_category Local University
last_indexed 2025-11-14T06:59:15Z
publishDate 2013
publisher Business and Organization Ethics Network (BON)
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spelling curtin-20.500.11937-124302017-01-30T11:30:40Z How chinese auditors' relativistic ethical orientations influence their love of money Woodbine, Gordon Fan, Ying Scully, Glennda Love of Money (LMOS) theory is well developed and widely used in studying people's beliefs about money (Luna-Arocas & Tang2004). This study examines the views of 612 Chinese auditors and establishes that the ideological positions adopted influence how they regard money and that these positions are related to underlying cultural norms. Forsyth's (1980) EPQis used to establish a viable model, which establishes that relativism strongly influences Chinese auditors" attitudes towards money and has important implications in terms of the impact on the accounting profession in that rapidly growing nation. 2013 Journal Article http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/12430 http://ejbo.jyu.fi/pdf/ejbo_vol18_no2_pages_20-29.pdf Business and Organization Ethics Network (BON) fulltext
spellingShingle Woodbine, Gordon
Fan, Ying
Scully, Glennda
How chinese auditors' relativistic ethical orientations influence their love of money
title How chinese auditors' relativistic ethical orientations influence their love of money
title_full How chinese auditors' relativistic ethical orientations influence their love of money
title_fullStr How chinese auditors' relativistic ethical orientations influence their love of money
title_full_unstemmed How chinese auditors' relativistic ethical orientations influence their love of money
title_short How chinese auditors' relativistic ethical orientations influence their love of money
title_sort how chinese auditors' relativistic ethical orientations influence their love of money
url http://ejbo.jyu.fi/pdf/ejbo_vol18_no2_pages_20-29.pdf
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/12430