Ethics Trumps Culture? A Cross-National Study of Business Leader Responsibility for Downsizing and CSR Perceptions

被引:0
|
作者
C. Lakshman
Aarti Ramaswami
Ruth Alas
Jean F. Kabongo
J. Rajendran Pandian
机构
[1] KEDGE Business School Bordeaux,Department of Management
[2] ESSEC Business School,College of Business
[3] Estonia Business School,Williamson College of Business Administration
[4] University of South Florida Sarasota-Manatee,undefined
[5] Youngstown State University,undefined
来源
Journal of Business Ethics | 2014年 / 125卷
关键词
Ethics; CSR; Responsibility attributions; Justice; Culture;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Downsizing remains a topic of great interest to both academics and practitioners. Yet, the impact of layoff decisions on perceptions of corporate social responsibility (CSR) has hardly been studied. We examine the impact of responsibility of business leaders making these layoff decisions, and characteristics of the downsizing implementation on convergence and divergence in (1) CSR perceptions, (2) victims’ perceptions of fairness, and (3) survivor commitment, in four countries. Using an experimental design, sixteen scenarios were distributed to (1) 163 managers in Estonia, (2) 152 MBA students in India and 125 MBA students in France, and (3) 186 (non-traditional) undergraduate students in the USA. Results suggest that when top managers are attributed with the responsibility for downsizing, the resulting perceptions of CSR are negative. A similar pattern of results is obtained for victims’ perceptions of fairness and survivor commitment. In addition, although there are differences in effect-size based on differences in power distance, these results hold good (are similar) across the four countries, from four different society clusters. We discuss implications, limitations, and future research directions.
引用
收藏
页码:101 / 119
页数:18
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] Cross-national Differences in Computer-Use Ethics: A Nine-country Study
    Michael E. Whitman
    Anthony M. Townsend
    Anthony R. Hendrickson
    Journal of International Business Studies, 1999, 30 : 673 - 687
  • [42] Work-family culture and organizational commitment A multidimensional cross-national study
    Agarwala, Tanuja
    Arizkuren, Amaia
    Del Castillo, Elsa
    Muniz, Marta
    PERSONNEL REVIEW, 2020, 49 (07) : 1467 - 1486
  • [43] Mediated public perceptions of police encampment clearances in Canada and France: a cross-national study
    Faury, Felicien
    Schneider, Christopher J.
    de Maillard, Jacques
    Nave, Carmen
    POLICING & SOCIETY, 2025, 35 (01): : 17 - 33
  • [44] A cross-national study of school students' perceptions of political messages in two election campaigns
    Rivers, Ian
    Carragher, Daniel J.
    Couzens, Jimmy
    Hechler, Rachel C.
    Fini, Gia B.
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF EDUCATIONAL RESEARCH, 2018, 92 : 10 - 19
  • [45] Public perceptions of future threats to humanity and different societal responses: A cross-national study
    Randle, Melanie
    Eckersley, Richard
    FUTURES, 2015, 72 : 4 - 16
  • [46] Is the cooking profession still 'hot'? A qualitative cross-national study of chefs' career perceptions
    Vu, Oanh Thi Kim
    Alonso, Abel Duarte
    Bressan, Alessandro
    Tran, Luong Ngoc
    Tran, Thanh Duc
    Nicholson, Gavin John
    JOURNAL OF HOSPITALITY AND TOURISM MANAGEMENT, 2023, 54 : 255 - 267
  • [47] Perceptions of drinking water quality and risk and its effect on behaviour: A cross-national study
    Doria, Miguel de Franca
    Pidgeon, Nick
    Hunter, Paul R.
    SCIENCE OF THE TOTAL ENVIRONMENT, 2009, 407 (21) : 5455 - 5464
  • [48] How does democracy influence citizens' perceptions of government corruption? A cross-national study
    Li, Hui
    Tang, Min
    Huhe, Narisong
    DEMOCRATIZATION, 2016, 23 (05) : 892 - 918
  • [49] The perceived trade-off between corporate social and economic responsibility: A cross-national study
    Usunier, Jean-Claude
    Furrer, Olivier
    Furrer-Perrinjaquet, Amandine
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF CROSS CULTURAL MANAGEMENT, 2011, 11 (03) : 279 - 302
  • [50] HOW INSTITUTIONS AND BUSINESS STRATEGIES AFFECT WAGES: A CROSS-NATIONAL STUDY OF CALL CENTERS
    Batt, Rosemary
    Nohara, Hiroatsu
    INDUSTRIAL & LABOR RELATIONS REVIEW, 2009, 62 (04): : 533 - 552