Anglia Ruskin University looking after your pension? Or what about your shares?
In a recent talk at the Cambridge Festival of Science, I spoke about the latest research relating to,
Since I began researching corporate psychopaths and the global financial crisis, the idea of the financial psychopath, an employee in the financial sector acting ruthlessly, recklessly, greedily and selfishly with other people's money, has gained traction.
The theory won support because,
These traits make them ruthless in pursuit of their own agendas and entirely focused on self-promotion and self-advancement.
But my ongoing research goes even further.
It has found that psychopaths are willing to knowingly cause,
Personal greed outweighs the immense social and community costs of implementing that greed.
Previous research found they are freed by their selfish philosophy of life and their trivializing of other people from the restraints of being evenhanded, truthful or generous.
This new research also shows that a majority of psychopaths would even be willing to cause a global financial crisis - if they personally would profit from, for example, falling stock prices.
Only a tiny minority of non-psychopaths would be willing to do this.
Race to The Top
Financial insiders appear to agree with the assumption that psychopaths have always been prevalent in the sector.
Many psychologists and other management commentators have come to the same conclusion.
Researchers have also found that interpersonal-affective psychopathic traits - such as deceitfulness, superficial charm and a lack of remorse - were associated with success in the finance sector.
Employees at financial institutions in New York scored significantly higher on these traits than people in the wider community.
They also had significantly lower levels of emotional intelligence (as would be expected of psychopaths)...
Employees at financial institutions in New York were found to score higher for psychopathic traits than the general population. IM_photo/Shutterstock
What's more, having psychopathic traits has also been linked to higher annual incomes - as well as a higher rank within the corporation.
In other words,
This corresponds with findings that show there are more psychopaths at the top of organizations than at the bottom.
Creating Destruction
This is not to say that personal success in climbing the corporate ladder equates to professional success when someone reaches the top job.
Quite the opposite...
In fact, my research has shown that psychopathic leadership is associated with organizational destruction.
This includes a greater propensity to,
In one study over a ten-year period, psychopathic fund managers were found to generate annual returns that were 30% lower than their less psychopathic peers.
The research team concluded that among elite financial investors,
But this does not translate into improved financial performance at the organizational level, where the presence of the psychopathic is actually counterproductive.
Fraud has always been associated with the psychopathic,
Years ago, one bank reportedly used a psychopathy measure to recruit staff.
But I would advise against hiring people who score very highly, because they are totally concerned with personal success.
For example,
Unlike the rest of the population,
Seen through this lens, the appeal of the corporate banking sector - and the salaries and bonuses it offers - to people with these traits soon becomes clear...
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