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A revision of Hofstede’s model of national culture: old evidence and new data from 56 countries

Michael Minkov (Sofia Local Center, Varna University of Management, Sofia, Bulgaria)

Cross Cultural & Strategic Management

ISSN: 2059-5794

Article publication date: 1 September 2017

Issue publication date: 17 April 2018

15350

Abstract

Purpose

Hofstede’s model of national culture has enjoyed enormous popularity but rests partly on faith. It has never been fully replicated and its predictive properties have been challenged. The purpose of this paper is to provide a test of the model’s coherence and utility.

Design/methodology/approach

Analyses of secondary data, including the World Values Survey, and a new survey across 56 countries represented by nearly 53,000 probabilistically selected respondents.

Findings

Improved operationalizations of individualism-collectivism (IDV-COLL) suggest it is a robust dimension of national culture. A modern IDV-COLL index supersedes Hofstede’s 50 year-old original one. Power distance (PD) seems to be a logical facet of IDV-COLL, rather than an independent dimension. Uncertainty avoidance (UA) lacks internal reliability. Approval of restrictive societal rules and laws is a facet of COLL and is not associated with national anxiety or neuroticism. UA is not a predictor of any of its presumed main correlates: importance of job security, preference for a safe job, trust, racism and xenophobia, subjective well-being, innovation, and economic freedom. The dimension of masculinity-femininity (MAS-FEM) lacks coherence. MAS and FEM job goals and broader values are correlated positively, not negatively, and are not related to the MAS-FEM index. MAS-FEM is not a predictor of any of its presumed main correlates: achievement and competition orientation, help and compassion, preference for a workplace with likeable people, work orientation, religiousness, gender egalitarianism, foreign aid. After a radical reconceptualization and a new operationalization, the so-called “fifth dimension” (CWD or long-term orientation) becomes more coherent and useful. The new version, called flexibility-monumentalism (FLX-MON), explains the cultural differences between East Asian Confucian societies at one extreme and Latin America plus Africa at the other, and is the best predictor of national differences in educational achievement.

Research limitations/implications

Differences between subsidiaries of a multinational company, such as IBM around 1970, are not necessarily a good source of knowledge about broad cultural differences. A model of national culture must be validated across a large number of countries from all continents and its predictions should withstand various plausible controls. Much of Hofstede’s model (UA, MAS-FEM) fails this test while the remaining part (IDV-COLL, PD, LTO) needs a serious revision.

Practical implications

Consultancies and business schools still teach Hofstede’s model uncritically. They need to be aware of its deficiencies.

Originality/value

As UA and MAS-FEM are apparently misleading artifacts of Hofstede’s IBM data set, a thorough revision of Hofstede’s model is proposed, reducing it to two dimensions: IDV-COLL and FLX-MON.

Keywords

Acknowledgements

The collection of primary data for this study was organized by MediaCom Ltd and the Hofstede Center at Itim International, a Dutch-Finnish cross-cultural consultancy. Financial support was provided by MediaCom. Neither of the two organizations has influenced the study design, the data analysis, the decision to write and submit this paper, or any opinion expressed in it, in any way. All main findings in this study were shared with Geert Hofstede on several occasions by February 2017.

Citation

Minkov, M. (2018), "A revision of Hofstede’s model of national culture: old evidence and new data from 56 countries", Cross Cultural & Strategic Management, Vol. 25 No. 2, pp. 231-256. https://doi.org/10.1108/CCSM-03-2017-0033

Publisher

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Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2018, Emerald Publishing Limited

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