Summary of “Tri Hita Karana: Balinese Local Wisdom and Its Role in Combating Corruption” (Ardiana et al., 2025, Journal of Accounting and Organizational Change)
This paper investigates how Tri Hita Karana (THK)—the Balinese philosophy of maintaining harmony among God (Parahyangan), humans (Pawongan), and the natural environment (Palemahan)—can serve as an ethical foundation for fighting corruption in public institutions.
The study focuses on how embedding THK values into accounting practices and organisational change strengthens moral responsibility, collective accountability, and sustainable governance. Rather than viewing corruption merely as a legal or technical problem, the paper argues that it is also a moral and cultural issue that requires ethical transformation from within.
The central research question is:
How does integrating Tri Hita Karana principles influence accounting and organisational change to prevent corruption and promote integrity in Balinese government institutions?
Corruption continues to undermine accountability and trust in many developing countries, including Indonesia. It distorts financial reporting, weakens internal controls, and reduces public confidence. Despite various anti-corruption initiatives—such as the Corruption Eradication Commission (KPK), Government Internal Control System (SPIP), and digital budgeting systems (SIMDA)—the problem persists because most solutions focus on rules and enforcement, not on ethics and cultural behaviour.
Bali provides a unique case where corruption levels are relatively low compared with other Indonesian provinces. This success is widely attributed to the influence of Tri Hita Karana, a long-standing local philosophy that guides personal, organisational, and communal conduct. THK’s focus on harmony among the spiritual, human, and natural worlds aligns closely with modern governance principles of accountability, transparency, and sustainability.
By examining how these values shape public officials’ attitudes and accounting practices, this study contributes to understanding how local wisdom can complement institutional reforms to build more ethical public governance systems.
The paper is grounded in ethics and organisational change theories, arguing that culture provides the moral infrastructure needed to sustain accountability. It also engages with comparative ethical frameworks such as Ubuntu in Africa (emphasising community and solidarity) and Confucian ethics in East Asia (focusing on hierarchy and moral order).
What makes Tri Hita Karana distinct is its three-dimensional harmony:
Together, these principles produce a holistic ethical system that balances personal morality, social relations, and environmental care—transforming accounting and governance into moral acts of stewardship.
The study adopts a qualitative approach based on 21 semi-structured interviews with Kepala Dinas (department heads) from eight regencies and one municipality across Bali. Interviews were conducted between July and November 2022, each lasting around 80 minutes.
Participants represented diverse departments (finance, environment, tourism, planning, and culture). Although all were Balinese Hindus, they managed teams with multi-religious staff, making the discussion of THK inclusive and pragmatic.
The data were analysed thematically, using the three THK dimensions as analytical lenses—Parahyangan, Pawongan, and Palemahan. This framework revealed how each principle operates as an anti-corruption mechanism through moral, social, and ecological accountability.
(a) Parahyangan – Spiritual Integrity and Moral Responsibility
This principle strengthens ethical accountability by linking professional duties to moral and spiritual values. Public officials described their work as not only accountable to auditors or superiors but also to a higher moral order.
Departments introduced reflective practices—informally described as “spiritual audits”—where staff paused before closing accounts or submitting reports to consider whether their actions were honest and just. Leaders who embodied humility and fairness inspired similar behaviour among subordinates.
“Our work is audited not only by the inspectorate but also by our conscience,” said one department head.
These practices reduced manipulation of data and misuse of funds, fostering internal moral restraint. Non-Hindu staff were encouraged to interpret Parahyangan as universal ethical accountability, ensuring inclusiveness and shared values.
(b) Pawongan – Collective Oversight and Social Harmony
Pawongan promotes mutual respect, cooperation, and participatory control. Departments adopted group-based financial reviews where several officers jointly checked expenditure, fostering a “many eyes” approach.
This reduced the power asymmetry that often enables corruption, replacing hierarchical inspection with horizontal peer monitoring. Inter-departmental meetings also became forums for learning and ethical dialogue rather than for blame.
“We invite colleagues and even local community representatives to review our budgets,” one participant explained, emphasising how inclusion strengthened trust.
Through Pawongan, financial management became a shared responsibility that built transparency and collective integrity.
(c) Palemahan – Environmental Accountability and Sustainable Governance
The third principle extends accountability beyond people to the environment. Departments began considering environmental consequences when allocating budgets or designing programmes. Some introduced sustainability metrics in financial evaluation, linking ethical governance to ecological preservation.
“Every project now has an environmental assessment, so we use funds more responsibly,” said another respondent.
Palemahan thus reframes public budgeting as a long-term stewardship process rather than a short-term financial transaction. It discourages corruption by reinforcing the idea that misusing public resources harms both society and nature.
The findings show that Tri Hita Karana transforms anti-corruption efforts from external control to internal conviction. Instead of relying solely on sanctions, it embeds integrity through shared moral values and cultural consciousness.
This moral internalisation creates three layers of accountability:
Compared with other cultural ethics, THK integrates spirituality and ecology into governance, offering a more comprehensive model of ethical public management. It turns accounting into a spiritual–social–ecological practice, linking professional responsibility with human and planetary well-being.
Theoretical Contribution:
The study extends the literature on ethics and organisational change by showing how local wisdom can institutionalise moral accountability. It demonstrates that anti-corruption reform in developing contexts must go beyond regulations to include cultural and ethical transformation.
Practical Implications:
Policy Implications:
Policymakers should integrate cultural frameworks into governance reform, recognising that values rooted in local wisdom can enhance compliance, trust, and sustainability.
Social Implications:
THK promotes social cohesion by aligning governance with community ethics, enabling diverse religious and cultural groups to find common moral ground.
Research limitations:
Future research directions: