This article presents the results of a survey among more than six hundred bankers in the Netherlands about banking culture. It addresses the question why trust in banks remains so low (45% of clients trust banks in the Netherlands). The key findings indicate that the problem is not so much immor- al bankers or a few rotten apples but rather the dominance of a competitive banking culture. The findings suggest that clients’ trust may be regained when banks leave behind their focus on performance targets, financial incentives, and behavioral regulation and move instead to a caring culture with a focus on relationships and open discussion of ethical dilemma’
The macroeconomic impact of banks' misconduct led users of financial services to be deterred from us...
What does the general public know about banking supervision? What objectives does the public think b...
In the wake of the Wells Fargo scandal, a whole host of industry stakeholders and observers have tri...
This article presents the results of a survey among more than six hundred bankers in ...
This article presents the results of a survey on banking culture in the Netherlands. It shows that d...
Bank employees in the Netherlands want to focus on clients and the interests of their clients. But t...
A poor risk culture was one of the causes of the financial crisis. Surprisingly, there is no evidenc...
This study answers some elimentary questions about Dutch shareholding structures, such as the struct...
Using eight annual household surveys for the Netherlands between 2006 and 2013, we find that respond...
What does the general public know about banking supervision? What objectives does the public think b...
This article is based on a dissertation submitted for an MSc in Marketing submitted by the first aut...
This paper examines the impact of organizational culture on bank stability. We rely on the Competing...
What does the general public know about banking supervision? What objectives does the public think b...
If you think culture is too squishy, please hear us out. In Part I of this Article, we set out what ...
Compliance failures remain a big challenge within the financial services sector, despite various reg...
The macroeconomic impact of banks' misconduct led users of financial services to be deterred from us...
What does the general public know about banking supervision? What objectives does the public think b...
In the wake of the Wells Fargo scandal, a whole host of industry stakeholders and observers have tri...
This article presents the results of a survey among more than six hundred bankers in ...
This article presents the results of a survey on banking culture in the Netherlands. It shows that d...
Bank employees in the Netherlands want to focus on clients and the interests of their clients. But t...
A poor risk culture was one of the causes of the financial crisis. Surprisingly, there is no evidenc...
This study answers some elimentary questions about Dutch shareholding structures, such as the struct...
Using eight annual household surveys for the Netherlands between 2006 and 2013, we find that respond...
What does the general public know about banking supervision? What objectives does the public think b...
This article is based on a dissertation submitted for an MSc in Marketing submitted by the first aut...
This paper examines the impact of organizational culture on bank stability. We rely on the Competing...
What does the general public know about banking supervision? What objectives does the public think b...
If you think culture is too squishy, please hear us out. In Part I of this Article, we set out what ...
Compliance failures remain a big challenge within the financial services sector, despite various reg...
The macroeconomic impact of banks' misconduct led users of financial services to be deterred from us...
What does the general public know about banking supervision? What objectives does the public think b...
In the wake of the Wells Fargo scandal, a whole host of industry stakeholders and observers have tri...