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Disclosing sales compensation and its impacts on misleading sales behaviors: some observations from Taiwan’s life insurance salespeople

Yu-Hsien Lu (Farglory Life Insurance Limited Company, Taichung, Taiwan)
Yue-Min Kang (Farglory Life Insurance Limited Company, Taichung, Taiwan)
Lu-Ming Tseng (Department of Risk Management and Insurance, Feng Chia University, Taichung, Taiwan)

Journal of Financial Regulation and Compliance

ISSN: 1358-1988

Article publication date: 16 May 2023

Issue publication date: 27 October 2023

174

Abstract

Purpose

The purpose of this paper is to explore how sales compensation disclosure, salespeople’s perception of corporate social responsibility (CSR) toward customers (i.e. customer-focused CSR), regulatory knowledge and coworkers’ ethical behavior may influence life insurance salespeople’s moral intensity and intentions to engage in misleading sales behaviors.

Design/methodology/approach

The hypotheses are analyzed using partial least squares (PLS) regression with the data gathered from full-time life insurance salespeople in Taiwan.

Findings

The main findings indicate that disclosing sales compensations will alter the ethical decision-making process of life insurance salespeople. The findings further point out that customer-focused CSR is an important variable affecting moral intensity and ethical intentions.

Originality/value

There has not been any research on the effects of compensation disclosure on moral intensity and misleading sales behavior. The literature gap has led to a poor understanding of the relationship between the compensation disclosure policy and ethical sales behavior. Moreover, previous studies indicate that specific factors (such as moral intensity and ethical intention) are directly associated, while the research shows that as long as a regulatory policy (e.g. the policy of compensation disclosure) changes, the correlation between these variables may shift from significant to nonsignificant (or vice versa). The results are interesting enough to warrant more research, and they also show that the direct link between variables mentioned in previous research is not always stable or universal.

Keywords

Citation

Lu, Y.-H., Kang, Y.-M. and Tseng, L.-M. (2023), "Disclosing sales compensation and its impacts on misleading sales behaviors: some observations from Taiwan’s life insurance salespeople", Journal of Financial Regulation and Compliance, Vol. 31 No. 5, pp. 588-606. https://doi.org/10.1108/JFRC-01-2023-0013

Publisher

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Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2023, Emerald Publishing Limited

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