National Culture and the Values of Organizational Employees
- 1 March 1996
- journal article
- Published by SAGE Publications in Journal of Cross-Cultural Psychology
- Vol. 27 (2) , 231-264
- https://doi.org/10.1177/0022022196272006
Abstract
The values of 8,841 managers and organization employees from 43 countries were surveyed. The range of nations included paralleled many of those surveyed by Hofstede (1980) but added also substantial samples from ex-communist nations. Questionnaire items focused primarily on measures of universalism-particularism, achievement-ascription, and individualism-collectivism. Multidimensional scaling of country means revealed three interpretable dimensions. The relation of these dimensions to the results of earlier large-scale surveys and to a variety of demographic indexes is explored. It is found that there are continuing substantial differences in modal cultural values of organization employees and that these are largely consistent with differences reported by others. The present results suggest that the dimensions defined by Hofstede as individualism-collectivism and power distance may be better defined as representing varying orientations toward continuity of group membership (loyal involvement/ utilitarian involvement) and varying orientations toward the obligations of social relationship (conservatism/egalitarian commitment).Keywords
This publication has 20 references indexed in Scilit:
- CorrectionJournal of Experimental Social Psychology, 1991
- International Preferences in Selecting MatesJournal of Cross-Cultural Psychology, 1990
- On the Empirical Identification of Dimensions for Cross-Cultural ComparisonsJournal of Cross-Cultural Psychology, 1989
- Imposed Etics-Emics-Derived Etics: The Operationalization of a Compelling IdeaInternational Journal of Psychology, 1989
- Cross-Cultural Psychology: Current Research and TrendsAnnual Review of Psychology, 1989
- Finding universal dimensions of individual variation in multicultural studies of values: The Rokeach and Chinese value surveys.Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 1988
- Chinese Values and the Search for Culture-Free Dimensions of CultureJournal of Cross-Cultural Psychology, 1987
- The location of experience: A manifest time orientationActa Psychologica, 1968
- Some Measurements of Achievement OrientationAmerican Journal of Sociology, 1965
- Toward a General Theory of ActionPublished by Harvard University Press ,1951