The Psychology of Ethics in the Finance and Investment Industry
$7.75
| Author(s) | |
|---|---|
| Product Type |
Ebook |
| Format |
|
| Skill Level |
Intermediate to Advanced |
| Pages |
104 |
| Publication Year |
2007 |
| Delivery |
Instant Download |
The Psychology of Ethics in the Finance and Investment Industry offers a rare and rigorous examination of ethical decision-making through the lens of psychology, specifically within financial markets and investment organizations. Rather than treating ethics as a purely regulatory or philosophical issue, Thomas Oberlechner approaches it as a behavioral phenomenon—shaped by incentives, group dynamics, narratives, emotions, and professional identity.
The book explores why ethical failures repeatedly occur in finance despite extensive rules, compliance frameworks, and professional standards. Oberlechner demonstrates that unethical behavior often emerges not from overt malice, but from psychological blind spots, normalization of deviance, social pressure, and institutional storytelling that reframes questionable actions as acceptable or even necessary.
Drawing on behavioral finance, organizational psychology, and real-world cases from banking, asset management, and financial advisory environments, the author explains how moral judgment is influenced by context, authority, competition, and market stress. Special attention is given to how market participants rationalize decisions under performance pressure, short-term incentives, and career risk.
Importantly, this book does not remain theoretical. It provides a structured framework for ethical awareness, reflection, and resilience, showing how individuals and institutions can design environments that reduce ethical drift. The result is a deeply analytical yet practical work—highly relevant for professionals who want to understand not just what ethical standards are, but why they break down in real market conditions.
✅ What You’ll Learn:
- Why ethical failures in finance are often psychological rather than intentional.
- How incentives, competition, and performance pressure distort moral judgment.
- The role of group dynamics, authority, and narratives in ethical decision-making.
- How cognitive biases and emotional factors influence compliance and misconduct.
- Why rules and codes alone are insufficient to ensure ethical behavior.
- How ethical “slippage” develops gradually inside organizations.
- Practical approaches to strengthening ethical awareness and responsibility.
💡 Key Benefits:
- Provides a behavioral framework for understanding ethics beyond regulation.
- Helps professionals recognize ethical blind spots before they become failures.
- Bridges behavioral finance, psychology, and professional conduct.
- Valuable for risk management, compliance culture, and leadership development.
- Encourages long-term trust, credibility, and professional sustainability.
👤 Who This Book Is For:
- Finance and investment professionals seeking deeper ethical awareness.
- Portfolio managers, analysts, traders, and advisors operating under pressure.
- Compliance officers, risk managers, and senior leaders in financial institutions.
- Students of behavioral finance and financial psychology.
- Anyone interested in how psychology shapes moral behavior in markets.
📚 Table of Contents:
- Chapter 1: Ethics in Finance — Beyond Rules and Compliance
- Chapter 2: Psychological Foundations of Moral Judgment
- Chapter 3: Incentives, Pressure, and Ethical Blind Spots
- Chapter 4: Social Dynamics, Authority, and Groupthink
- Chapter 5: Narratives, Rationalization, and Moral Justification
- Chapter 6: Emotions, Stress, and Decision-Making Under Uncertainty
- Chapter 7: Ethical Failures in Financial Organizations
- Chapter 8: Designing Ethical Awareness and Responsibility
- Chapter 9: Implications for Professionals and Institutions
The Psychology of Ethics in the Finance and Investment Industry By Thomas Oberlechner
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