Abstract:
Many researchers revile that there exists an impeccable augmentation of corruption in all sectors
both locally as well as globally. Elicits contemplation of the research focus on the relationship
between employee demographics and corruption-prone behavior among the public-sector
employees. In addition, it is imperati,'e to explain to what extent such relationship is being
moderated by the career cycle stage of the public-sector employees in Sri Lanka. Question such
as what stimulates public sector employees to engage with corruption, what differentiation could
exist among different demographics towards corruption and finally this study address the impact
of employee career cycle stage over the relationship between employee demographics and
corruption prone behavior. Research becomes significant in terms of academic contribution to
develop the cognitive enhancement of practical consideration regarding eradication of corruption
in the public sector. Research is organized with reference to the deductive philosophy and mixed
strategy has been utilized. Quantitativc analysis augmentcd with 611 questionnaires to clicit
responses from selected representative sample and qualitatively articulated 22 interviews and
ethnography are used within the selected six public sector institutions which are reported with
highest level of corruption over the last 5 years. Transactional cost, agency theorem and
institutional theorem were used along with the career cycle theory to build the theoretical
foundation of the research. Forcefully, it has been recognized that the corruption-prone behavior
is driven by the internal factors and external factors principally. Further analyses were conducted
based on the three pillars, primarily descriptive statistics, secondarily correlation analysis and
finally about the hypothesis texting aligned with descriptive statistics and Tukey-HSD test,
A:-JOV A, and qualitative analysis, it is revealed that the career cycle stage has no moderating
effect over the relationship between employee demographics and corruption-prone behavior. But
in relation to both demographics and the external factors together (synchronization) career cycle
stage impelled no moderating impact. Qualitative analysis revealed that with forceful articulated
aspect of "fearlessness" as the key consideration of corruption due to political interference and
the superior security interventions. Predominantly it concludes that female is less vulnerable to
corruption than the male counterpart in Sri Lanka and external factors have therefore become
more prominent as the corruption prone behavior than the demographic factor.