A Reconsideration of Hofstede’s Fifth Dimension

New Flexibility Versus Monumentalism Data From 54 Countries

  • Minkov, Michael
  • Bond, Michael H.
  • Dutt, Pinaki
  • Schachner, Michael
  • Morales, Oswaldo
  • Sanchez, Carlos
  • Jandosova, Janar
  • Khassenbekov, Yerlan
  • Mudd, Ben
Cross-Cultural Research 52(3):p 309-333, July 2018. | DOI: 10.1177/1069397117727488

Hofstede’s “long-term orientation” (LTO) may be one of the most important dimensions of national culture, as it highlights differences on a continuum from East Asia to Africa and Latin America, strongly associated with differences in educational achievement. However, LTO’s structure lacks theoretical coherence. We show that a statistically similar, and theoretically more focused and coherent, dimension of national culture, called “flexibility versus monumentalism,” or vice versa, can be extracted from national differences in self-enhancement and self-stability or self-consistency, as well as a willingness to help people. Using data from nearly 53,000 respondents recruited probabilistically from 54 countries, we provide a new national flexibility-versus-monumentalism index that measures key cultural differences on the world’s East–West geographic axis and predicts educational achievement better than LTO or any other known dimension of national culture.

Copyright © 2018 Sage Publications
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