Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
1018223 | Journal of Business Research | 2011 | 7 Pages |
Abstract
The research applies the Material Values Scale (MVS; Richins and Dawson, 1992) cross-culturally by comparing materialism among Polish and American business students. Cultural differences (e.g., greater humanistic/collectivistic/Christian values in Poland) suggest lower MVS scores for Poles than for Americans. This prediction is consistent with the Local Culture hypothesis (i.e., that a strong local culture results in maintenance of traditional values in defense against global forces). Contrary to predictions, data suggest no Polish-American materialism differences, a finding consistent with the globalization hypothesis (i.e., increasing globalization leads to relatively uniform worldwide materialism). As a precursor to hypotheses testing, confirmatory factor analysis (CFA) tests the construct validity and cross-cultural validity of the MVS. The findings suggest substantial difficulties with the scale that limit the confidence in conclusions based on the scale. Based on these findings, future research discussion aims at developing a measure of materialism with potentially greater construct validity for cross-cultural applications.
Related Topics
Social Sciences and Humanities
Business, Management and Accounting
Business and International Management
Authors
Jerome J. Tobacyk, Barry J. Babin, Jill S. Attaway, Stanislaw Socha, David Shows, Kevin James,