CONFIGURAL INVARIANCE OF SHORT MONEY METAPHOR SCALE (SMMS) IN A WHOLE SAMPLE FROM NIGERIA, KENYA AND SOUTH AFRICA

A CROSS-NATIONAL TEST OF HOFSTEDE'S (1980) NATIONAL CULTURE TAXONOMY IN AFRICA

Authors

  • UGOCHUKWU ANTHONY OBIAJULU NNEDUM Nnamdi Azikiwe University - Nigeria
  • OBINNA JUDE EZEOKANA Nnamdi Azikiwe University - Nigeria
  • BERNADETTE EZELIORA University of Nairaobi-Kenya
  • NTOMCHUKWU SYLVESTER MADU University of Limpopo-South Africa

Keywords:

generative money theory, collectivism cultural money metaphor, individualism invariance, contextual validity, Nigeria, Kenya, South Africa

Abstract

One of the basis of Generative Money Theory
V(GMT) and cultural meaning of money literature, 30 items in the domains of Importance, Achievement, and Poverty repulsive obsession were generated. Factor analysis yielded' three factors: Importance-Significance, Achievement-dignity and Poverty repulse obsession-neurotic ambivalence. A 15 item Moaey, Metaphor Scale (AIMS) was developed on the basis of three of these factors. The study provided a testing ground for two substantive cross-cultural theory: Hofstede's (1980) cross-cultural taxonomy and Nnedum's (2009) classical Generative Money theory. The findings of the study debunk conventional taxonomy ~that tends to treat Africa as a monolithic culture. The study recommends holistic theoretical approach in dealing with cross-national research on individualism and MOM in Africa. Recognizing the enigmatic issues in cross cultural research will enhance our understanding of organizational behaviour in
Africa. Configural Invsrisnce, as well as contextual validity, were determined and discussed.

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Published

2018-09-15

How to Cite

NNEDUM, U. A. O., EZEOKANA, O. J., EZELIORA, B., & MADU, N. S. (2018). CONFIGURAL INVARIANCE OF SHORT MONEY METAPHOR SCALE (SMMS) IN A WHOLE SAMPLE FROM NIGERIA, KENYA AND SOUTH AFRICA: A CROSS-NATIONAL TEST OF HOFSTEDEā€™S (1980) NATIONAL CULTURE TAXONOMY IN AFRICA. African Psychologist: An International Journal of Psychology and Allied Profession, 1(1). Retrieved from https://journals.aphriapub.com/index.php/AP/article/view/516

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