Look at Me: Overt Status-Seeking Behavior and Competitive Emergence among Securities Analysts

Author(s):  
Anne H. Bowers ◽  
Henrich R. Greve ◽  
Hitoshi Mitsuhashi
2013 ◽  
Vol 16 (3) ◽  
pp. 244-261 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. Patrick Rhamey ◽  
Bryan R. Early

State competition for international status takes a variety of forms, but most are linked to states’ related pursuits of economic and/or military power. The Olympics offer a unique venue for states to compete with one another in a forum whose consequences do not directly spill over into either realm. Instead, states compete against one another for Olympic medals—a currency with no other international political value beyond the prestige that can be obtained with them. Leveraging a theoretical framework nested in Social Identity Theory, we develop a set of hypotheses to explain how states can be attributed international status as a result of their performance in the Olympic Games and via playing host to them. Using a linear hierarchical method of analysis, we evaluate the impact of participation in the Summer Olympics on the status attributed to members of the international system from 1960 to 2012. Our findings indicate that states whose performance exceeds expectations and smaller-sized countries that play host to the Olympic Games disproportionately gain status from their participation in the sporting regime.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Silina Zaatri ◽  
Idan M. Aderka ◽  
Uri Hertz

Sharing information is ubiquitous in human societies and has a major impact on individual and group decision-making. The content of the information people share and the style in which they do so are shaped by their social goals, such as seek to gain influence or to signal group affiliation. Here we suggest that the balance between information-sharing goals shifts along a social anxiety dimension. We begin by demonstrating that similarity to others drive activity in the brain’s valuation system even in a competitive advice-taking task. Then, in three behavioral experiments, we show that social anxiety levels are related to the tendency to give advice resembling that given by rival advisers and to refrain from status-seeking behavior. Social anxiety was also associated with negative social comparisons with rival advisers. Our findings highlight the role of competing social goals in shaping information sharing and t the spread of extreme views.


2016 ◽  
Vol 22 (2) ◽  
pp. 199-224 ◽  
Author(s):  
Juin-Jen Chang ◽  
Wei-Neng Wang ◽  
Ying-An Chen

This paper explores the growth effects of both consumption- and wealth-induced social comparisons in a unified small open endogenous growth model. We analytically show that in an open economy not only do these two distinct status-seeking motives have very different growth effects, but these growth effects are also quite different from the conventional wisdom based on a closed economy. Status-seeking behavior need not favor economic growth. The asset portfolios of households and the imperfection of the international asset market both play an important role and jointly govern the growth effects of social status seeking. We also perform a quantitative experiment, showing that our analytical findings are robust and empirically plausible. Our analysis provides novel implications for social comparisons and new insights into the literature.


2016 ◽  
Vol 22 (4) ◽  
pp. 797-822 ◽  
Author(s):  
Joshua Freedman

International Relations scholars concerned with explaining status-seeking behavior in the international system draw heavily from social comparison theory and its observations that individuals judge their worth, and accordingly derive self-esteem, through social comparisons with others. According to this logic, states become status seekers because, like individuals, they have an innate desire for favorable social status comparisons relative to their peers. Thus, the great power status literature is often framed in the language of accommodation, and adjustment, which presupposes that status insecurities develop from unfavorable social comparisons and can be resolved through relative social improvements. This article challenges these assumptions by noting, as psychology has acknowledged for some time, that individuals use both social and temporal forms of comparison when engaging in self-evaluation. Where social comparisons cause actors to ask “How do I rank relative to my peers?” temporal comparisons cause actors to evaluate how they have improved or declined over time. This article advances a temporal comparison theory of status-seeking behavior, suggesting that many of the signaling problems associated with status insecurity emerge from basic differences in how states evaluate their status, and whether they privilege temporal over social comparisons. The implications are explored through China’s contemporary struggle for status recognition, situating this struggle within the context of China’s civilizational past and ongoing dispute over Taiwan.


2018 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sugata Marjit ◽  
Sattwik Santra ◽  
Koushik Kumar Hati

Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document