Title: Culture
1Cultures recent consequences
- Auckland University of Technology
- 11 April 2005
- Geert Hofstede
- The individual components of this presentation
and the entire presentation may be used in
not-for-profit educational settings with proper
attribution. - Citation Hofstede, Geert (2005) Cultures recent
consequences PowerPoint file, http//crosscultura
lcentre.homestead.com/Publications.html, 12 July
2021
2Culture (in the anthropological sense)
- collective programming of the mind
distinguishing the members of one group or
category of people from another - group/category can be nation, region,
organization, profession, generation, gender
3Mental programmmes
4Values
- Values are strong emotions with a minus and a
plus pole - Like evil-good, abnormal-normal, dangerous-safe,
dirty-clean, immoral-moral, indecent-decent,
unnatural-natural, paradoxical-logical,
ugly-beautiful, irrational-rational - What is rational is a matter of values
5The learning of culture
6National versus organizational cultures
- National culture differences are rooted in
values learned before age 10 - They pass from generation to generation
- For organizations, they are given facts
- Organizational cultures are rooted in practices
learned on the job - Given enough management effort, they can be
changed - International organizations are held together by
shared practices, not by shared values
7Research into national culturesInhabitants of
the world, William Darton, 1790
8Research into national culturesCultures
Consequences, Geert Hofstede, 1980 5 dimensions
- Inequality more or less? Power Distance large
vs. small - The unfamiliar fight or tolerate? Uncertainty
Avoidance strong vs. weak - Relation with in-group loose or tight?
Individualism vs. Collectivism - Emotional gender roles different or same?
Masculinity vs. Femininity - Need gratification later or now? Long vs.
Short term orientation
9National culture dimensions now scores showing
relative positions of gt 70 countries
- Initially based on employees of IBM subsidiaries
in 40 countries around 1970 - Until 2002, 6 major replications (elites,
employees of other corporations, airline pilots,
consumers, civil servants) - Results very stable even if cultures shift,
countries shift together so relative scores
remain valid
10Dimension 1 Power Distance
- Extent to which the less powerful members of
institutions and organizations expect and accept
that power is distributed unequally - Transferred to children by parents and other
elders
11Dimension 2 Uncertainty Avoidance
- Extent to which members of a culture feel
threatened by ambiguous and unknown situations - Not to be confused with risk avoidance risk is
to uncertainty as fear is to anxiety. Uncertainty
and anxiety are diffuse feelings anything may
happen
12SMALL PD, WEAK UA
LARGE PD, WEAK UA
CHINA, HK, SINGAPORE INDIA, BANGLADESH
INDONESIA, MALAYSIA
NORDIC CTRS ANGLO CTRS, USA NETHERLANDS
GERMAN SPK CTRS HUNGARY ISRAEL
TAIWAN, THAILD, PAKIST LATIN CTRS, E-EUROPE
JAPAN, KOREA
SMALL PD, STRONG UA
LARGE PD, STRONG UA
13Dimension 3 Individualism vs. Collectivism
- Individualism A society in which the ties
between individuals are loose everyone is
expected to look after self and immediate family - Collectivism A society in which individuals from
birth onwards are part of strong in-groups which
last a lifetime
14Dimension 4 Masculinity vs. Femininity
- Masculinity A society in which emotional gender
roles are distinct men are supposed to be
assertive, tough and focused on material success,
women on the quality of life - Femininity A society in which emotional gender
roles overlap both men and women are supposed to
be modest, tender, and focused on the quality of
life
15COLLECTIVIST,FEMININE
COLLECTIVIST,MASCULINE
THAILAND, KOREA, VIETN INDON, MALAYS, SINGAP
COSTA RICA, CHILE PORTUGAL, RUSSIA
HK, CHINA, JAPAN, PHILS INDIA,
BANGLADESH MEXICO, VENEZUELA GREECE,
ARAB WORLD
SPAIN FRANCE NETHERLANDS NORDIC COUNTRIES
CZECHIA, HUNGARY
POLAND, ITALY GERMAN SPK CTRIES ANGLO
COUNTRIES, USA
INDIVIDUALIST, FEMININE
INDIVIDUALIST,MASCULINE
16Validations of country scores against over 400
measures from other sources
- Examples
- Power distance Respect for elders corruption
polarization and violence in national politics - Uncertainty avoidance Religiosity xenophobia
identity card obligation faster driving - Individualism GNP per capita faster walking
weak family ties frequency of using the word I - Masculinity Assertiveness performance versus
solidarity fewer women elected homophobia
17Dimension 5 Long Term vs. Short Term Orientation
- Long Term Orientation is directed at the future
and seeks future rewards through perseverance and
thrift - Short Term Orientation is directed at the past
and present through respect for tradition,
fulfilling social obligations and seeking
immediate rewards
18- LONG TERM ORIENTATION
- CHINA, HK, TAIWAN
- JAPAN, VIETNAM
- KOREA
- BRAZIL, INDIA
- THAILAND, SINGAPORE
- NETHERLANDS, NORDIC COUNTRIES
- BANGLADESH
- BELGIUM, FRANCE, GERMANY
- AUSTRALIA, NEW ZEALAND
- USA, BRITAIN, CANADA
- SPAIN, PHILIPPINES
- AFRICAN COUNTRIES
- PAKISTAN
- SHORT TERM ORIENTATION
19Correlates of LTO
- Short term
- Good and evil are absolute
- Concern with Truth
- Analytical thinking
- Weaker at mathematics
- Old age seen as a bad time but starting late
- Higher rates of imprisonment
- Spending rates
- Focus on bottom line
- Past and present economic stagnation
- Long term
- Good and evil are relative
- Concern with Virtue
- Synthetic thinking
- Better at mathematics
- Old age seen as a good time and starting early
- Lower rates of imprisonment
- Savings rates
- Aim at market position
- Past and present economic growth
20Are there national management and leadership
cultures ?
- In national cultures, all spheres of life and
society are interrelated family, school, job,
religious practice, economic behavior, health,
crime, punishment, art, science, literature,
management, leadership - There is no separate national management or
leadership culture management and leadership
can only be understood as part of the larger
culture
21Other examples of research results (last 10 years)
- Consumer behavior
- Entrepreneurship
- Business goals
- Human rights
- Perceived corruption
221. Consumer behavior
- 15 EU countries, 1970 2000
- When national incomes become more similar,
consumer behavior converges as long as a product
is scarce - After scarcity is over, consumer behavior
diverges, following cultural values, especially
Uncertainty Avoidance and Masculinity/Femininity
which are unrelated to income - Research de Mooij, 2004
23Examples of consumer behavior divergence cars in
15 European countries
- Cars per 1000 inhabitants
- correlation with GNP/capita
- 1969 r .93
- 1994 r .42 ns
- Percent households with 2 cars
- correlation with GNP/cap with MAS
index - 1970 r .58 r .43 ns
- 1997 r -.28 r .62
- Prefers new over second hand
- correlation with GNP/cap with UncAv
index - 1970 r .47 r .79
- 1997 r -.32 r .80
- Source De Mooij, 2000
24Example of consumer behavior new communication
technology in Europe
- Adoption of PCs, internet and mobile phones no
influence of national wealth, but slower where
Uncertainty Avoidance was stronger - Research de Mooij, 2004
25Example of consumer behavior use of internet in
Europe
- Lasting differences in what internet is used
for - Feminine cultures use internet more for education
and leisure (chatting) - Small Power Distance cultures use internet more
for business - Weak Uncertainty Avoidance cultures use internet
more for mail - Research de Mooij, 2004
262. Entrepreneurship
- European database on self-employed in 23
countries (excl. agriculture), 1974-1994 - Varied from Greece18.6 to Finland 5.7
- Correlated positively with Uncertainty Avoidance
- Especially with UA component dissatisfaction
with life and with democracy - For 12 EU countries, economic factors explained
32 of variance. Adding cultural factors 64 - Self-employment arises out of dissatisfaction
- Wennekers, Noorderhaven, Thurik Hofstede, 2002
273. Business goals
- Goals of successful business persons in your
country - As perceived by evening MBA students with
full-time day jobs - 21 groups, 16 universities, 15 countries, period
1995-99 - List of 15 possible goals
- Clustering of universities and countries based on
their answers - Country scores correlated with PDI, UAI, IDV,
LTO, GNP/capita - Research Hofstede et al, 2002
28Business goalsexamples of country differences 1
- relatively most important ascribed goals
- in USA in UK and NZ
- Growth of the business This years profits
- This yearprofits Staying within the law
- Personal wealth Responsib. tds employees
- Power Continuity of the business
- Staying within the law Patriotism, national
pride - Respecting ethical norms Respecting ethical norms
29Business goalsexamples of country differences 2
- relatively most important ascribed goals
- Hong Kong, Hawaii (As) in China
- Profits 10 years from now Respecting ethical
norms - Creating something new Patriotism, national pride
- Game and gambling spirit Honor, face, reputation
- Growth of the business Power
- Honour, face, reputation Responsib. tds society
- Personal wealth Profits 10 years from now
304. Culture and Human Rights
- HR Index 1992 based on 1948 Universal Declaration
- Regression on wealth (GNP/cap)plus culture
indices - Across 52 countries only wealth explains
differences (50)If we want more respect for
Human Rights we should combat poverty
31Human Rights Index
- 27 poor countries still only poverty explains
differences (38) - 25 wealthy countries individualism explains
differences (53) - Universal declaration of human rights is
based on individualist values
325. Perceived corruption
- An annual Corruption Perception Index (CPI),
including almost all countries in the world, is
composed by Transparency International of Berlin
and published on Internet. It is based on data
from business, media and diplomats - Globally, the CPI is primarily a matter of
national poverty, not of culture (poor countries
are perceived as more corrupt)
33 Perceived corruption
- When the analysis is limited to wealthy
countries, corruption perception differences no
longer depend on wealth, but on culture. - In 1984, Michael Hoppe collected scores for the
first 4 culture dimensions from Western political
and intellectual elites, including prominent
politicians, based on their own values. - 76 of the CPI differences among 18 Western
countries in 2002 could be predicted from their
elites self-scored Power Distance in 1984. - Sources Hoppe,Salzburg Seminar own research
34Power tends to corrupt, and absolute power
corrupts absolutely (Lord Acton , 1890)
35General conclusion from culture studies
- There is no such thing as a universal economic
or psychological rationality - NATIONALITY
- constrains
- RATIONALITY
36 Student-level book, 2005 Academic book, 2001