Publication:
Corporate ethical identity disclosures: the perceived, the publicized and the applied in Islamic banks
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Date
2014
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Abstract
The public’s perception about Islamic banks is that, they are ethical banks founded on religious precepts hence; they would be more transparent when compared to conventional banks, but our preliminary studies proves that perception to be wrong. This paper examines the levels of expected and actual ethical identity disclosures by Islamic banks using various dimensions of ethical identity disclosures for 21 banks in Bahrain and Malaysia. The main source of data is the annual reports of each bank for five consecutive years, 2007 to 2011. Data collected were analyzed using Ethical Identity Index (EII) model and Descriptive Analysis. Based on EII analysis, we found that, the aggregate actual applied disclosure in both Malaysia and Bahrain is only 51.7% of the expected industry benchmark. We also found that, the most applied disclosure levels in both countries is the debtor’s dimension (77.7%) and the least applied disclosure dimension is the environment disclosures (6.6%). Other important dimensions that might impact on Islamic bank’s future acceptance, profitability, growth, sustainability and reputation were less disclosed. Hence, we conclude and recommend for a collective effort and commitment by both regulators and Islamic bank’s management to ensure increased ethical disclosures to meet the public perception and expectations.
Keywords
Corporate ethical identity disclosures , Disclosure dimensions , Islamic banks , Content analysis
Citation
Abdul Rahman, R., Danbatta, B. L., & Saimi, N. S. (2014). Corporate ethical identity disclosures: the perceived, the publicized and the applied in Islamic banks. International Journal of Trade, Economics and Finance, 5(2), 199-203. https://doi.org/10.7763/IJTEF.2014.V5.371
Publisher
IACSIT Press