The Burden of Power: Construing Power as Responsibility (Rather Than as Opportunity) Alters Threat-Challenge Responses

Author:

Scholl Annika1,de Wit Frank2,Ellemers Naomi3,Fetterman Adam K.4,Sassenberg Kai15,Scheepers Daan6

Affiliation:

1. Leibniz-Institut für Wissensmedien, Tübingen, Germany

2. Melbourne Business School, Australia

3. University of Utrecht, The Netherlands

4. The University of Texas at El Paso, USA

5. University of Tübingen, Germany

6. Leiden University, The Netherlands

Abstract

Power usually lowers stress responses. In stressful situations, having high (vs. low) power heightens challenge and lowers threat. Yet, even power-holders may experience threat when becoming aware of the responsibility that accompanies their power. Power-holders can construe (i.e., understand) a high-power position primarily as opportunity to “make things happen” or as responsibility to “take care of things.” Power-holders construing power as responsibility (rather than opportunity) may be more likely to experience demands—such as taking care of important decisions under their control—as outweighing their resources, resulting in less challenge and more threat. Four experiments with subjective and cardiovascular threat-challenge indicators support this. Going beyond prior work on structural aspects (e.g., power instability) that induce stress, we show that merely the way how power-holders construe their power can evoke stress. Specifically, we find that power construed as responsibility (vs. opportunity) is more likely to imply a “burden” for the power-holder.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Social Psychology

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