Affiliation:
1. Department of Government University of Texas at Austin Austin Texas USA
2. Department of Politics and International Studies University of Cambridge Cambridge UK
Abstract
AbstractAre banks sensitive to risk and reward in following global corporate transparency rules? Using a worldwide field experiment, this study evaluates competing predictions from expected utility, behavioralist, and institutionalist accounts. We incorporated a dozen companies around the world to make over 15,000 email solicitations asking for corporate accounts from 5000 of the world's internationally connected banks. Treatments randomize the risk profiles of different companies—by their countries’ association with corruption, terrorism, and tax evasion—and vary rewards by stating differing amounts of business revenues. The outcomes are the rates at which banks offer accounts and comply with rules on customer identification. The results suggest that banks are moderately responsive to risk—though not reward—but the magnitude of the effects is small, providing mixed evidence for conventional models and suggestive support for institutionalist accounts.
Reference38 articles.
1. Crime and Punishment: An Economic Approach
2. The Nature of the Firm
3. Collin Matthew.2021. “What Lies Beneath: Evidence from Leaked Account Data on How Elites use Offshore Banking.” Brookings Global Working Paper #156.https://www.brookings.edu/wp‐content/uploads/2021/05/What‐lies‐beneath_Collin.pdf.
4. The Past, Present, and Future of Behavioral IR