Effects of Confucian values and national culture on business ethics in China: an empirical examination

IF 3.2 Q2 ETHICS
Rafik I. Beekun, Jim Westerman, Ji Guo, Daniel Jones, Jennifer Westerman
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

China’s business sector has been described as facing serious ethical challenges, including corruption and bribery, distributive injustice, environmental pollution, and misspending of public funds. Unethical decision-making in business represents a potentially destabilizing force for government, business, and society. Recent calls for research that is detailed, nuanced, contemporary, and context-specific on the effects of Asian national business systems on ethical business practices, according to Pereira et al. (2017), are particularly relevant for countries including China that possess the entanglement of a “multiplexity”-multiple business systems co-existing within the same economy reliant on ethics and institutional trust for effective functioning, as discussed by Witt and Redding (2013). To this end, we conduct exploratory research investigating the relationship among Confucian values, Hofstede’s national culture, and ethical decision-making within a business context in China. Using data collected from 550 Chinese MBA students and business executives, results indicate that although both Confucian values and Hofstede’s national culture dimensions are associated with the use of egoism and justice in ethical decision-making scenarios, differential patterns emerged in these relationships. Confucian values were more predictive of outcomes. Of particular interest were the relationships between Confucian values and ethical criteria of yi and justice as well as li and zhi with egoism. Results suggest if the goal is enhancing institutional trust through an increased use of more principled justice-oriented ethics in business in China, an emphasis should be placed on yi (righteousness), coupled with a deemphasis on hierarchy and tradition in the form of li (ritual propriety) and zhi (wisdom). Including love of learning (haoxue), trust (xin), a long-term orientation, and individualistic messages oriented towards family and self-sufficiency may also strengthen overall ethical decision-making for SMEs, MNCs, and SOEs in navigating a multiplexity environment.

Abstract Image

儒家价值观与民族文化对中国商业伦理影响的实证检验
摘要中国的商业部门面临着严重的道德挑战,包括腐败和贿赂、分配不公、环境污染和公共资金滥用。商业中不道德的决策对政府、企业和社会来说是一种潜在的不稳定力量。根据Pereira等人(2017)的说法,最近呼吁对亚洲国家商业体系对道德商业实践的影响进行详细、细致、当代和具体背景的研究,这对包括中国在内的国家尤其重要,因为这些国家拥有“多重性”的纠缠——正如Witt和Redding(2013)所讨论的那样,多个商业体系在同一经济中共存,依赖于道德和制度信任来有效运作。为此,我们进行了探索性研究,调查儒家价值观、霍夫斯泰德的民族文化和中国商业环境下的伦理决策之间的关系。从550名中国MBA学生和企业高管中收集的数据表明,尽管儒家价值观和Hofstede的民族文化维度都与伦理决策场景中利己主义和正义的使用有关,但这些关系中出现了不同的模式。儒家价值观更能预测结果。特别令人感兴趣的是儒家价值观与“义”、“义”、“礼”、“志”与利己主义的伦理标准之间的关系。结果表明,如果目标是通过在中国商业中更多地使用更有原则的以正义为导向的伦理来增强制度信任,那么应该强调义(正义),同时减少对礼(礼制)和智(智慧)形式的等级和传统的强调。热爱学习(好学)、信任(信)、长期取向以及以家庭和自给自足为导向的个人主义信息也可能加强中小企业、跨国公司和国有企业在应对多元化环境时的整体道德决策。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
2.60
自引率
38.50%
发文量
16
期刊介绍: The Asian Journal of Business Ethics (AJBE) publishes original articles from a wide variety of methodological and disciplinary perspectives concerning ethical issues related to business in Asia, including East, Southeast and South-central Asia. Like its well-known sister publication Journal of Business Ethics, AJBE examines the moral dimensions of production, consumption, labour relations, and organizational behavior, while taking into account the unique societal and ethical perspectives of the Asian region.  The term ''business'' is understood in a wide sense to include all systems involved in the exchange of goods and services, while ''ethics'' is understood as applying to all human action aimed at securing a good life. We believe that issues concerning corporate responsibility are within the scope of ethics broadly construed. Systems of production, consumption, marketing, advertising, social and economic accounting, labour relations, public relations and organizational behaviour will be analyzed from a moral or ethical point of view. The style and level of dialogue involve all who are interested in business ethics - the business community, universities, government agencies, non-government organizations and consumer groups.The AJBE viewpoint is especially relevant today, as global business initiatives bring eastern and western companies together in new and ever more complex patterns of cooperation and competition.
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