Disclosure & Accountability

Facade and Self-Deception in the Deteriorating Financial Firm

Frederick Balderston


Abstract
Financial executives and financial regulators sometimes agree to ignore facts whose overt recognition would precipitate a crisis. They use accounting facades to do this. The financial firm may also be jeopardized by executive self-deception. Two forms of this are optimistic biases and failure to canvas market alternatives adequately. The top executive officer may also exhibit a pattern of ever-accelerating risk-taking, resulting in "turbo-deterioration" of the firm, or the firm may be so organized as to induce imprudent risk-taking at subordinate levels. Facades and self-deceptions pose important, unresolved issues of public policy and financial regulation.

California Management Review

Published at Berkeley Haas for more than sixty years, California Management Review seeks to share knowledge that challenges convention and shows a better way of doing business.

Learn more