How Do Consumers React to Company Moral Transgressions? The Role of Power Distance Belief and Empathy for Victims

<jats:title>Abstract/jats:title <jats:p>This research proposes that consumers vary in their response to company moral transgressions as a function of power distance belief (PDB), which is the extent that consumers accept inequality (a prominent moral principle). Specifically, consumers with lower PDB tend to feel more empathy for victims, which in turn heightens harm perceptions and negative moral emotions, leading to less favorable reactions toward the transgressing company. A series of nine studies and four supplementary experiments provides converging evidence for the PDB effect and underlying empathy-based process, while identifying victim salience and company crisis response strategy as theoretically and pragmatically relevant moderators. Specifically, the PDB effect emerges when victim salience is high (evoking greater empathy among lower-PDB consumers) but is attenuated when victim salience is low (and empathy is not evoked). Likewise, the PDB effect on company evaluations can be mitigated when the transgressing company offers both an apology and remedy, which together signal the company’s empathy for victims and remedy for harm that are salient to low-PDB consumers. Together, these findings shed light on how consumer reactions to company moral transgressions vary by culture, transgression characteristics, and company response strategies, providing guidance to companies in crisis./jats:p

This is a pre-copyedited, author-produced PDF of an article accepted for publication in 'Journal of Consumer Research' following peer review. The version of record [Xu, H. (Felix), Bolton, L.E., and Winterich, K.P. (2021). How Do Consumers React to Company Moral Transgressions? The Role of Power Distance Belief and Empathy for Victims. Journal of Consumer Research 48, 77–101.] is available online at: https://doi.org/10.1093/jcr/ucaa067.

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Work Title How Do Consumers React to Company Moral Transgressions? The Role of Power Distance Belief and Empathy for Victims
Access
Open Access
Creators
  1. Haiyue (Felix) Xu
  2. Lisa E Bolton
  3. Karen Page Winterich
License In Copyright (Rights Reserved)
Work Type Article
Publisher
  1. Oxford University Press (OUP)
Publication Date February 1, 2021
Publisher Identifier (DOI)
  1. 10.1093/jcr/ucaa067
Source
  1. Journal of Consumer Research
Deposited September 09, 2021

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  • Added Creator Haiyue (Felix) Xu
  • Added Creator Lisa E Bolton
  • Added Creator Karen Page Winterich
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