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Metadatos
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemA Further Understanding of the Effects of Materialism at Work: Longitudinal and Meta-analytical Evidence
Tipo
Facultad
Carrera/Programa
- Doctorado en Administración de Empresas
Autor
Profesor Guía
Título al que opta
- Doctor en Administración de Empresas
Modalidad
- Tesis monográfica
Fecha de aprobación
- 2020
Fecha de publicación
2020Materias
Keywords
- Work
- Materialism
- Meta-analysis
- Need frustration
- Need satisfaction
- Longitudinal analysis
- Self-determination theory
- Intrinsic and extrinsic goals
Descriptores
- Autodeterminación
- Objetivos en el trabajo
- Obras de graduación UAI
Resumen
This thesis explores unanswered issues regarding the established negative consequences of pursuing
extrinsic or materialistic goals (e.g., wealth, image, status) versus intrinsic goals (e.g., relationships, self-
development, altruism) for individuals, both in the general life context and at work. Specifically, this
thesis is comprised by three quantitative studies that draw on Self-determination theory and use more
sophisticated methodologies than literature to date allowing to advance in the understanding of why, when
and in which contexts these consequences exist. Paper 1 used longitudinal data from a large sample of
adult Chilean workers (N=1841) to test and provide evidence of the longitudinal mediation of gratitude in
the materialism-need satisfaction/need frustration relationship. By doing so, Paper 1 provides a
theoretically sound mechanism of why materialism is detrimental for individuals well-functioning. Paper
2 and 3 focus on the work context, testing key underlying assumptions regarding the possible effects of
pursuing materialistic values in this context. Paper 2 uses the same sample as Paper 1, but provides
between-level (cross-lagged panel model) and within-level (trait-state-occasion model) longitudinal
evidence of the negative consequences of pursuing materialism at work by finding a positive relationship
between materialism and burnout, mediated by need frustration. Paper 3 systematically reviews the
literature addressing the materialism-individual work outcome link using a meta-analytical procedure.
Important insights emerge from this paper, as materialism is found to be related stronger to ill-being than
to well-being outcomes in the workplace. Education and position in the organization are found to
moderate the materialism-wellbeing/illbeing relationship. Furthermore, materialism is found to have both
positive and negative consequences for employee’s attitudes and behaviors. The results of this thesis
extend current literature on materialism and self-determination theory and raise important ethical
concerns regarding the promotion of materialistic goals in the work context.
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