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Collectivistic norms, beliefs and Mexican OCBs: gender and generation differences

Miguel A. Baeza (College of Business, Tarleton State University-Fort Worth Campus, Fort Worth, Texas, USA)
Jorge Gonzalez (Robert C. Vackar College of Business & Entrepreneurship, The University of Texas Rio Grande Valley, Edinburg, Texas, USA)
Olga Chapa (College of Business, University of Houston-Victoria, Victoria, Texas, USA)
Richard A. Rodriguez (Robert C. Vackar College of Business & Entrepreneurship, The University of Texas Rio Grande Valley, Brownsville, Texas, USA)

Cross Cultural & Strategic Management

ISSN: 2059-5794

Article publication date: 7 January 2022

Issue publication date: 22 March 2022

680

Abstract

Purpose

The authors study the role of collectivistic norms and beliefs on organizational citizenship behaviors (OCBs) in Mexico, including differences across gender and generations.

Design/methodology/approach

The authors researched the relationship between Mexican employees' collectivistic norms and beliefs and their OCBs, which the authors grouped into etic (universal), emic (regional) and unique (indigenous) categories, the latter referred to as Mexican OCBs (MOCBs). The authors also studied the role of gender and generations as moderators.

Findings

Collective norms had a positive relationship only on the etic OCBs of sportsmanship, while collective beliefs impacted altruism and civic virtue; the etic OCBs of personal development, protecting company resources, interpersonal harmony; and the MOCBs of dedication and camaraderie. Collective beliefs on the etic OCB of altruism, the emic OCB of protecting company resources and the unique MOCB of camaraderie were stronger for workers from Xers than for Millennials. Moderation tests also showed that collective belief had stronger effects on the emic OCB of protecting company resources and the unique MOCBs of dedication and camaraderie for men than for women.

Research limitations/implications

Gender roles in emerging economies where society is characterized by collectivistic attributes, especially in a sample drawn from professional employees, may have changed. This could explain the reason why most of the interactions were stronger for men. Future studies involving gender roles should look beyond a demographic variable and design an instrument measuring self-perceptions of role identity, such as the Bem Sex Role Inventory (Bem, 1974). This study's findings could be generalized, particularly, to other Latin American nations, but scholars should acknowledge differences in economic development and gender roles, as well as unique cultural elements (Arriagada, 2014; Hofstede, 1980).

Practical implications

The results of this study yield three practical implications for international managers, including (1) distinguishing between the impact of changing cultural norms or beliefs on OCBs, (2) understanding how demographic factors such as gender or generation may influence the degree of OCBs exhibited in the workplace by specific employee groups, and (3) identifying cultural contexts which promote OCBs. First, workers from a younger generation in a collectivistic society, such as Millennials, respond less positively than workers from older generations to cultural beliefs concerning OCBs, such that they are less willing to engage in a particular category of OCBs including protecting company resources.

Social implications

Global managers should be aware that employees engage in distinct OCBs for different reasons. Emphasizing cultural rules and norms behind helping one another may backfire in Mexico, particularly among men and younger generations of workers. This is understandable for these OCBs. For example, engaging in personal development for the organization's sake due to collective norms may be less effective that pursuing personal development opportunities that employees are passionate about or recognize as beneficial for their careers. Dedication and sportsmanship behaviors that stem from rules are likely less strong or effective as OCBs employees engage in due to strong beliefs or altruistic spontaneity.

Originality/value

The authors filled a gap in scholar's understanding of cultural norms and beliefs on behavior. Specifically, the authors found that cultural beliefs shape etic, emic and unique MOCBs, particularly for men and older generations, and that cultural norms have a negligible and sometimes negative role, being positively related only to the etic OCB of sportsmanship.

Keywords

Acknowledgements

This paper is dedicated in the memory of Dr John D. Sargent. Dr Sargent passed away unexpectedly in December 2019, and his loss was heartfelt to those who had the great opportunity to know him and countless students he impacted, including the author, in his over 25-year career in higher education. He was a Professor in International Business and Entrepreneurship at the University of Texas Rio Grande Valley (formerly known as the University of Texas-Pan American). John was a wonderful person, will be missed deeply and always be remembered for his legacy and contributions in his research, in particular, in Latin America.

Citation

Baeza, M.A., Gonzalez, J., Chapa, O. and Rodriguez, R.A. (2022), "Collectivistic norms, beliefs and Mexican OCBs: gender and generation differences", Cross Cultural & Strategic Management, Vol. 29 No. 2, pp. 349-378. https://doi.org/10.1108/CCSM-06-2021-0107

Publisher

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Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2021, Emerald Publishing Limited

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