The Indonesian Journal of Accounting Research
Vol 15, No 1 (2012): IJAR January 2012

The Effectiveness of Monitoring Controls and Individual Moral Reasoning in the De-escalation of Commitments

HERLINA RACHMAWATI DEWI (Universitas Islam Indonesia)
SUPRIYADI SUPRIYADI (Universitas Gadjah Mada)



Article Info

Publish Date
28 Jul 2013

Abstract

The study examines the impact of two adverse selection elements (private information and incentives to shirk) on managers' escalation of commitment and the effectiveness of monitoring controls and manager's moral reasoning in de-escalating managers' commitment. This study contributes to the accounting literature by comprehensively evaluating the escalation commitment phenomena from its determinants, the strategy to reduce it, and the impact of moral reasoning level on managers' escalation commitment behavior. This research employed laboratory experiment method with 95 participants of undergraduate and graduate students. Consistent with Harrell and Harrison (1994), the findings of this study indicate that managers who experience    adverse selection problems showed greater tendency to continue    unprofitable project than managers who do not have such problems. However, this study fails to provide empirical evidence that monitoring control and individual moral reasoning level affect the tendency of managers to escalate their commitment.

Copyrights © 2013






Journal Info

Abbrev

ijar

Publisher

Subject

Economics, Econometrics & Finance

Description

Private Sector : 1. Financial Accounting and Stock Market 2. Management and Behavioural Accounting 3. Information System, Auditing, and Proffesional Ethics 4. Taxation 5. Shariah Accounting 6. Accounting Education 7. Corporate Governance Public Sector 1. Financial Accounting 2. ...