Status and Corporate Illegality: Illegal Loan Recovery Practices of Commercial Banks in India
Academy of Management Journal, Forthcoming
50 Pages Posted: 28 Jan 2015
Date Written: July 14, 2014
Abstract
Why would high-status organizations, presumably secure in their positions, resort to illegality? This study considered the possibility that status theory might have overestimated the relative security of high-status organizations. Our theory that an inability to meet associates’ expectations about quality might be the source of insecurity was examined using data on illegal loan recovery practices employed by commercial banks in India between 2005 and 2009. High-status banks were found particularly likely to engage in illegal recovery practices. This was especially true when a high-status bank had experienced a decline in its financial asset quality or fallen behind the financial asset quality of its peers. When, however, a bank’s business partners placed greater emphasis on corporate social responsibility, it minimized a bank’s tendency to resort to illegal loan recovery practices.
Keywords: Status, Corporate Illegality, Reputation for Quality, Reputation for Integrity, India, Banking, Loan Recovery Practices
JEL Classification: K42, L2, C23
Suggested Citation: Suggested Citation