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Are societal-level values still relevant measures in the twenty-first century businessworld? A 39-society analysis

Authors :
David A. Ralston
Craig J. Russell
Jane Terpstra-Tong
Len J. Trevino
Prem Ramburuth
Malika Richards
Tania Casado
María Teresa de la Garza Carranza
Irina Naoumova
Yongjuan Li
Narasimhan Srinivasan
Tomasz Lenartowicz
Olivier Furrer
Ping Ping Fu
Andre Pekerti
Marina Dabic
Ian Palmer
Maria Kangasniemi
Erna Szabo
Jaime Ruiz Gutiérrez
Emmanuelle Reynaud
Fidel León Darder
Ana Maria Rossi
Florian von Wangenheim
Mario Molteni
Arunas Starkus
Audra Mockaitis
Arif Butt
Ilya Girson
Ajantha S. Dharmasiri
Min-Hsun Kuo
Tevfik Dalgic
Hung Vu Thanh
Yong-lin Moon
Philip Hallinger
Vojko V. Potocan
Joel Nicholson
Laurie Milton
Mark Weber
Chay Hoon Lee
Mahfooz Ansari
Jose Pla-Barber
Jorge C. Jesuino
Ruth Alas
Wade Danis
Ho-Beng Chia
Yongqing Fang
Detelin Elenkov
David M. Brock
Centre d'Études et de Recherche en Gestion d'Aix-Marseille (CERGAM)
Aix Marseille Université (AMU)-Université de Toulon (UTLN)
Source :
Asia Pacific Journal of Management, Asia Pacific Journal of Management, 2022, ⟨10.1007/s10490-022-09822-z⟩
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
HAL CCSD, 2022.

Abstract

International audience; Since the days of Hofstede (1980), cross-cultural comparisons of countries based on societal-level work values have been a norm. This approach has been represented more recently in Ronen and Shenkar’s (2013) 11 clusters of country cultures. However, more contemporary research found within-country heterogeneity of values/behaviors is substantial and growing exponentially across today’s twenty-first century businessworld. We investigated, across a sample of 39 societies, whether work values variance within societies was greater than work values variance across societies, and whether individual work values differences contributed more to predictions of behavioral performance criteria than the society in which the individuals lived. Both sets of analyses addressed how work values conceived at societal-levels are relevant in understanding the twenty-first century businessworld. Our findings revealed first that there was substantial within-society values heterogeneity, which resulted in the failure to replicate Ronen and Shanker’s (2013) societal cluster aggregations. Second, we found individual-level values contributed significantly to the prediction of employees’ behaviors, while societal-level values contributed substantially less. These findings strongly suggest that cross-cultural studies of work values predictive power are most relevant when conducted at the individual-level. Finally, we also make available for future investigators a 51-society database containing 11,780 individual-level records.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
02174561 and 15729958
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Asia Pacific Journal of Management, Asia Pacific Journal of Management, 2022, ⟨10.1007/s10490-022-09822-z⟩
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....b0e4332587da363357cad1342e1726b1