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Power and Corruption in Family Business: Perspectives and Cases

aUniversity of North Texas, USA
bTexas A&M University Central Texas, USA

Family Business Debates

ISBN: 978-1-80117-667-5, eISBN: 978-1-80117-666-8

Publication date: 28 November 2022

Abstract

Family businesses have several distinct features that distinguish them from other businesses. This aspect makes it imperative that scholars investigate issues with an additional focus on the interplay of family business dynamics. In this chapter, we explore the issues of power and corruption within family business, with the understanding that prior examinations of this phenomenon were primarily restricted to large public corporations that are not family owned. The key contribution of this chapter is to shed light on the dark side of family business, namely power enabled corruption. We do so by considering three dimensions that are unique to family firms, namely, ownership and control, generations, and governance. In particular, we highlight how these dimensions can facilitate corruption. It is possible that they may also challenge family business that try to detect, deter, and control corruption within their ranks. The lack of objective external evaluation, the ineffectiveness of internal checks, generational issues, family control, and the restricted nature of governance appear to contribute to exacerbating tensions that promote corruption becoming entrenched within family businesses. Following a case method approach, several illustrative examples of cases of power and corruption within family firms are provided, representing different geographic regions of the world, to showcase the widespread nature of this phenomenon. The three family business cases we illustrate (Grupo Odebrecht in Latin America, Sahara Group in South Africa and Foremost Maritime Group in China) represent multiple countries, continents, and geo-political frontiers. Each case illustrates how both corruption and power reinforce each other in family businesses. Implications of the magnifier effect of power on corruption in family business are discussed in terms of its impact, scale, and its enabling effect by providing a road map to corruption.

Keywords

Acknowledgements

Acknowledgment

We would like to thank Kamrul Hasan for research assistance on this project.

Citation

Salimath, M.S. and Orudzheva, L. (2022), "Power and Corruption in Family Business: Perspectives and Cases", Montiel Méndez, O.J., Tomaselli, S. and Maciel, A.S. (Ed.) Family Business Debates, Emerald Publishing Limited, Leeds, pp. 309-325. https://doi.org/10.1108/978-1-80117-666-820221016

Publisher

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Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2023 Manjula S. Salimath and Leyla Orudzheva. Published under exclusive licence by Emerald Publishing Limited