May the Angry Man Win? A Cross-Cultural Comparison of the Relationship between Anger, Guilt, and Promotion Decisions

We examine the influence of employee anger and guilt on promotion decisions, focusing on cross-cultural differences. We hypothesized that in an individualistic culture (Israel) employee anger (rather than guilt) would be associated with a promotion, while the reverse would be found in a collectivist...

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Main Authors: Rafaeli, A., Fiegenbaum, T., FOO, Maw Der, TAN, Hwee Hoon
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Language:English
Published: Institutional Knowledge at Singapore Management University 2004
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Online Access:https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/lkcsb_research/2803
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spelling sg-smu-ink.lkcsb_research-38022011-10-04T09:10:39Z May the Angry Man Win? A Cross-Cultural Comparison of the Relationship between Anger, Guilt, and Promotion Decisions Rafaeli, A. Fiegenbaum, T. FOO, Maw Der TAN, Hwee Hoon We examine the influence of employee anger and guilt on promotion decisions, focusing on cross-cultural differences. We hypothesized that in an individualistic culture (Israel) employee anger (rather than guilt) would be associated with a promotion, while the reverse would be found in a collectivistic culture (Singapore). Predictions were confirmed in the collectivistic but not the individualistic culture. A second study was conducted in order to uncover the reason underlying the unexpected results in the individualistic culture. In the second study, participants were asked about others’ promotion decisions, in contrast to the first study in which they were asked about their own decisions. In the second study, all the hypotheses were confirmed. Consequently, the two studies identify a critical moderating variable in the relationship between emotions and promotion decisions in individualistic cultures - the promotion decision source, demonstrating that participants’ personal decisions differ from the perceptions of others’ decisions. An additional moderating variable uncovered in the second study is culture. The two studies offer insights on the relationship between culture, emotions and promotion decisions. 2004-06-01T07:00:00Z text https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/lkcsb_research/2803 Research Collection Lee Kong Chian School Of Business eng Institutional Knowledge at Singapore Management University Business
institution Singapore Management University
building SMU Libraries
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider SMU Libraries
collection InK@SMU
language English
topic Business
spellingShingle Business
Rafaeli, A.
Fiegenbaum, T.
FOO, Maw Der
TAN, Hwee Hoon
May the Angry Man Win? A Cross-Cultural Comparison of the Relationship between Anger, Guilt, and Promotion Decisions
description We examine the influence of employee anger and guilt on promotion decisions, focusing on cross-cultural differences. We hypothesized that in an individualistic culture (Israel) employee anger (rather than guilt) would be associated with a promotion, while the reverse would be found in a collectivistic culture (Singapore). Predictions were confirmed in the collectivistic but not the individualistic culture. A second study was conducted in order to uncover the reason underlying the unexpected results in the individualistic culture. In the second study, participants were asked about others’ promotion decisions, in contrast to the first study in which they were asked about their own decisions. In the second study, all the hypotheses were confirmed. Consequently, the two studies identify a critical moderating variable in the relationship between emotions and promotion decisions in individualistic cultures - the promotion decision source, demonstrating that participants’ personal decisions differ from the perceptions of others’ decisions. An additional moderating variable uncovered in the second study is culture. The two studies offer insights on the relationship between culture, emotions and promotion decisions.
format text
author Rafaeli, A.
Fiegenbaum, T.
FOO, Maw Der
TAN, Hwee Hoon
author_facet Rafaeli, A.
Fiegenbaum, T.
FOO, Maw Der
TAN, Hwee Hoon
author_sort Rafaeli, A.
title May the Angry Man Win? A Cross-Cultural Comparison of the Relationship between Anger, Guilt, and Promotion Decisions
title_short May the Angry Man Win? A Cross-Cultural Comparison of the Relationship between Anger, Guilt, and Promotion Decisions
title_full May the Angry Man Win? A Cross-Cultural Comparison of the Relationship between Anger, Guilt, and Promotion Decisions
title_fullStr May the Angry Man Win? A Cross-Cultural Comparison of the Relationship between Anger, Guilt, and Promotion Decisions
title_full_unstemmed May the Angry Man Win? A Cross-Cultural Comparison of the Relationship between Anger, Guilt, and Promotion Decisions
title_sort may the angry man win? a cross-cultural comparison of the relationship between anger, guilt, and promotion decisions
publisher Institutional Knowledge at Singapore Management University
publishDate 2004
url https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/lkcsb_research/2803
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