When Winning is Everything : The Relationship between Competitive Worldviews and Job Applicant Faking

Details

Serval ID
serval:BIB_0E5D986F6FA9
Type
Article: article from journal or magazin.
Collection
Publications
Institution
Title
When Winning is Everything : The Relationship between Competitive Worldviews and Job Applicant Faking
Journal
Applied Psychology: International Review
Author(s)
Roulin N., Krings F.
ISSN
0269-994X
Publication state
Published
Issued date
10/2016
Peer-reviewed
Oui
Volume
65
Number
4
Pages
643-670
Language
english
Abstract
Job applicant faking, that is, consciously misrepresenting information during the selection process, is ubiquitous and a threat for the usefulness of various selection tools. Understanding antecedents of faking is thus of uttermost importance. Recent theories of faking highlight the central role of various forms of competition, for understanding why faking occurs. Drawing on these theories, we suggest that the more applicants adhere to competitive worldviews (CWs), that is, the more they believe that the social world is a competitive, Darwinian-type of struggle over scarce resources, the more likely they are to fake in employment interviews. We tested our hypothesis in three independent studies that were conducted in five different countries. Results show that CWs are strongly associated with faking, independently of job applicants' cultural and economic context. More specifically, applicants' CWs explain faking intentions and self-reported past faking above and beyond the Dark Triad of personality (Study 1), competitiveness and the six facets of conscientiousness (Study 2). Also, when faking is measured using a response randomization technique to control for social-desirability, faking is more prevalent among applicants with strong vs less strong CWs (Study 3). Taken together, this research demonstrates that competition is indeed strongly associated with undesirable applicant behaviors.
Web of science
Create date
07/06/2016 16:10
Last modification date
20/08/2019 13:35
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