The effect of materialism on unethical behaviour: The mediating role of self‐control

Author:

Yue Lei12,Zeng Xiangli1,Li Jing1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. School of Psychology Central China Normal University; Key Laboratory of Cyberpsychology and Behavior, Ministry of Education, and Hubei Human Development and Mental Health Key Laboratory Wuhan 430079 China

2. Ziyang College of Environmental Science and Technology Ziyang 641300 China

Abstract

AbstractSelf‐enhancement values (power, achievement, and hedonism) have been found to be important predictors of ethical behaviour; however, the link between materialism (also a kind of self‐enhancement value) and unethical behaviour and its underlying mechanisms have received limited attention from researchers. The present research examines the effect of materialism on unethical behaviour and the mediating role of self‐control across five multi‐method studies with Chinese samples. Using Chinese data from the Sixth World Values Survey, we confirmed that materialism was positively related to a variety of unethical behaviours such as fare evasion, theft, tax evasion, bribery, domestic violence, and violence against others (Study 1). In follow‐up experiments, priming materialism increased unethical behaviour (Studies 2 and 3). Moreover, through a questionnaire survey, we found that self‐control played a mediating role between materialism and unethical behaviour in specific social contexts (Study 4). Finally, the manipulation of high materialists' self‐control reduced their unethical behaviour, further verifying the mediating role of self‐control (Study 5). Our findings indicate that materialists tend to have lower levels of self‐control, thus they are more likely to engage in unethical behaviours. This research supports the hot/cool system model of self‐control and deepens our understanding of how materialism might lead to unethical behaviour.

Funder

China Scholarship Council

National Natural Science Foundation of China

Publisher

Wiley

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