A study comparing
leadership behavior across cultures with the use of a test based on transformational
leadership (Rudd, Kent, Blair & Schuele, 2009) shows that US and German leaders are quite similar in their leadership behavior. However, the results indicates that US leaders scored higher than the German leaders on each of the five behaviors studied. The Leader Behavior Inventory
(LBI) is used as the test as it has been used in other cultural comparisons (den Hartog, House, Hanges,
& Ruiz-Quintanilla, 1999; Quesada, Gonzalez, & Kent, 2008). Furthermore, the study draws on Hofstede and Hofstede’s (2005) four cultural dimensions.
According to Hofstede (1986), four distinct dimensions characterize a culture: 1. collectivism/individualism, 2. masculinity/femininity, 3. power distance and finally, 4. uncertainty avoidance. These dimensions influence people’s
relations and help assess the leader’s capability to manage change
and the attitudes and abilities of their colleagues and followers to accept and handle it.
References
Den Hartog,
D. N., House, R. J., Hanges, P. J., Ruiz-Quintanilla, S. A., & Dorfman, P.
W. (1999, Summer).Culture specific and cross-culturally generalizable implicit leadership
theories: are
attributes of charismatic/transformational leadership universally endorsed? Leadership Quarterly, 10, 219-257.
Hofstede, G. (1986). Cultural
differences in teaching and learning. International Journal of Intercultural
Relations, 10, 301- 320.
Hofstede, G., & Hofstede, G. J. (2005). Cultures and organizations. New York: McGraw Hill
Quesada,
G., Gonzalez, M., & Kent, T. W. (2008). A road for achiving an
international measure and
understanding on leaders‟ behaviors. Leadership
and Organizational Development , 29, 678-692.
Rudd, H.
Kent, T., Blair C.A., and Schuele, U. (2009) Leader Behavior Inventory: A Test
of Measure Equivalence in Germany and the United States, International Journal of Leadership Studies,(5), 1, 22-36.