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Privacy please: Power distance and people’s responses to data breaches across countries

Shilpa Madan (), Krishna Savani () and Constantine S. Katsikeas ()
Additional contact information
Shilpa Madan: Virginia Tech
Krishna Savani: The Hong Kong Polytechnic University
Constantine S. Katsikeas: University of Leeds

Journal of International Business Studies, 2023, vol. 54, issue 4, No 8, 754 pages

Abstract: Abstract Information security and data breaches are perhaps the biggest challenges that global businesses face in the digital economy. Although data breaches can cause significant harm to users, businesses, and society, there is significant individual and national variation in people’s responses to data breaches across markets. This research investigates power distance as an antecedent of people’s divergent reactions to data breaches. Eight studies using archival, correlational, and experimental methods find that high power distance makes users more willing to continue patronizing a business after a data breach (Studies 1–3). This is because they are more likely to believe that the business, not they themselves, owns the compromised data (Studies 4–5A) and, hence, do not reduce their transactions with the business. Making people believe that they (not the business) own the shared data attenuates this effect (Study 5B). Study 6 provides additional evidence for the underlying mechanism. Finally, Study 7 shows that high uncertainty avoidance acts as a moderator that mitigates the effect of power distance on willingness to continue patronizing a business after a data breach. Theoretical contributions to the international business literature and practitioner and policy insights are discussed.

Keywords: privacy; power distance; data breach; ownership; uncertainty avoidance; experiments (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2023
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Citations: View citations in EconPapers (4)

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DOI: 10.1057/s41267-022-00519-5

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