Abstract
Research shows that the effects of creative personality on moral disengagement and unethical behaviors are mixed. To reconcile the disparate findings, we draw on interdependence theory to unravel how and when creative personality is related to moral disengagement through countervailing pathways. Specifically, we propose competitive motivation and prosocial motivation as two distinct mechanisms that explain the double-edged effects of creative personality on moral disengagement and subsequent unethical behaviors. Furthermore, we hypothesize a cross-level moderating effect of competitive climate on the relationships between competitive/prosocial motivation and moral disengagement. Results based on three-wave data from 753 employees showed that creative personality increased moral disengagement and subsequent unethical behaviors through competitive motivation but decreased moral disengagement and subsequent unethical behaviors through prosocial motivation. In addition, competitive climate weakened the negative relationship between prosocial motivation and moral disengagement and the negative indirect relationship between creative personality and unethical behaviors via prosocial motivation and moral disengagement.
Original language | English |
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Number of pages | 18 |
Journal | Journal of Business Ethics |
DOIs | |
Publication status | Published - 1 Jun 2022 |
Corresponding author email
zhengxm@sem.tsinghua.edu.cnProject sponsor
National Natural Science Foundation of China (NSFC)fund for building world-class universities (disciplines) of Renmin University of China
Project No.
7200221472172074
KYGJD2022005
Keywords
- Competitive climate
- Creative personality
- Moral disengagement
- Motivation
- Unethical behaviors
Indexed by
- ABDC-A
- FT
- SSCI
- Scopus