Subscribe
The latest psychology and neuroscience discoveries.
My Account
  • Mental Health
  • Social Psychology
  • Cognitive Science
  • Psychopharmacology
  • Neuroscience
  • About
No Result
View All Result
PsyPost
PsyPost
No Result
View All Result
Home Exclusive Social Psychology

Survey across five world regions suggests that collectivistic societies are more narcissistic than individualistic societies

by Beth Ellwood
December 16, 2021
in Social Psychology
Share on TwitterShare on Facebook
Stay on top of the latest psychology findings: Subscribe now!

People living in collectivistic cultures (Asia and Africa) report higher levels of the narcissism facets of leadership/authority and grandiose exhibitionism compared to people from individualistic cultures (USA, Europe, Australia/Oceania). These findings come from a study published in the journal Personality and Individual Differences.

Personality researchers have long contended that the culture we live in helps determine our personality. For example, cultures differ in the extent that they endorse collectivism and individualism, and this distinction helps inform the personality traits of citizens. Collectivistic societies, like Asia, value interconnectedness between members and emphasize the needs of the group. Individualistic societies, like the United States, value individual needs and freedoms.

One personality trait that appears to differ across cultures is narcissism, an anti-social personality trait characterized by an exaggerated ego and lack of empathy. At the subclinical level, narcissism is presumed to exist along a continuum, with some people scoring higher and others lower on the trait.

“Almost two decades ago, an influential study was published by Foster et al. (2003) that examined the relationship between narcissism and culture: Western nations reported higher narcissism scores than collectivistic nations,” said study author Ramzi Fatfouta of the HMKW University for Media, Communication and Business. “Many scholars interpreted these results to suggest that Western societies promote individualism and thus a ‘culture of narcissism.’ My colleagues and I wondered whether this still was the case nowadays and re-examined this proposition with new analytical procedures in a different sample.”

While it is widely assumed that Western societies are more narcissistic, Fatfouta and his team said that some studies have actually suggested the opposite — that people in collectivistic societies score higher in narcissism. Moreover, it is unclear whether the construct of narcissism has been measured the same way across cultures.

In light of these limitations, Fatfouta and his colleagues conducted a study to explore cross-cultural differences in narcissism using a multifaceted measure of narcissism. They also employed a test of measurement invariance of the Narcissism Personality Inventory.

The study authors analyzed a publicly available dataset that included 2,754 adults from five world regions. While roughly half the participants (51%) were U.S. residents, 17% were from Asia, 13% were from Europe, 5% were from Canada, 5% were from Australia/Oceania, 3% were from the Middle East, 3% were from Africa, and 1% were from Latin America. All participants had completed the Narcissism Personality Inventory (NPI), a 40-item self-report measure of narcissism.

Importantly, the researchers first conducted a multi-group confirmatory factor analysis, a statistical test that measured whether the NPI was assessing the same constructs across the different world regions. They found that one of the three dimensions of narcissism, entitlement/exploitativeness, did not meet measurement invariance. This suggests that, rather than measuring the same construct across cultures, this facet was culturally specific.

However, the facets of leadership/authority and grandiose exhibitionism were invariant across cultures. Accordingly, the researchers next examined the cross-cultural differences in these two facets. It was revealed that respondents from collectivistic cultures (Asia, Africa) tended to score higher in these two dimensions of narcissism compared to respondents from individualistic cultures (USA, Europe, Australia/Oceania).

The study’s findings cast doubt on the contention that narcissism is higher in individualistic cultures. “Our results painted quite the opposite picture: Individuals from more collectivistic cultures (i.e., Asia and Africa) reported higher narcissism levels than individuals from more individualistic cultures (i.e., USA, Europe, and Australia/Oceania),” Fatfouta told PsyPost. “In an effort to clarify the ambiguity revolving around narcissism and culture, our study provides up-to-date evidence for a narcissistic bias in collectivistic as compared to individualistic nations.”

Fatfouta and his team noted that previous research suggests that collectivistic cultures are becoming more individualistic and that narcissism is rising in these parts of the world.

“An important open question is why we observe these intriguing results. With growing digitization across the world as well as the increased use of the Internet, people from collectivistic societies may be moving away from defining themselves in terms of social or familial groups and, instead, moving toward individual identities and efforts,” Fatfouta said.

“Especially social media platforms make it easier to “export” the Western lifestyle or individualism – instead of defining oneself through community or social relationships, self-relevant aspects are increasingly coming into focus. Thus, heightened narcissism in collectivistic societies may also reflect an increasing adoption of self-centered values (e.g., standing out) versus other-centered values (e.g., fitting in.)”

mportantly, the study also revealed an issue with using the NPI as a cross-cultural tool to measure narcissism. The findings suggest that the facet of entitlement/exploitativeness, the “socially toxic” component of narcissism, “exists in conceptually different forms in different countries.” The authors of the study say that a task for future research is to design a questionnaire that can hone in on this antagonistic aspect of narcissism across cultures.

Additionally, future studies should obtain a more diverse sample, given that the current study included more U.S. residents than residents of other countries and polled only English-speaking respondents. This may have skewed the sample toward participants who were more Westernized.

“Although our sample contains several different world regions across the globe, it is predominantly female, self-selected, English-speaking, and recruited over the Internet (similar to the original study),” Fatfouta explained. “English-speaking respondents may, per se, be more Westernized than non-English-speaking residents of many world regions. Future studies are needed to examine samples outside the Internet setting. Also, no inferences can be made concerning causality: The common conception is that culture shapes personality, but it is equally plausible to assume that personality shapes culture. We eagerly await future research that examines these issues.”

The study, “Are individualistic societies really more narcissistic than collectivistic ones? A five-world region cross-cultural re-examination of narcissism and its facets”, was authored by Ramzi Fatfouta, Artur Sawicki, and Magdalena Żemojtel-Piotrowska.

RELATED

People with higher intelligence make more accurate predictions about their lifespan
Business

Voice pitch influences who we trust with money

August 2, 2025

Voice pitch may unconsciously influence how we judge others' trustworthiness with money. New research finds that people prefer higher-pitched voices in financial exchanges, offering greater generosity and trust—even when the stakes are high and rational decisions would suggest otherwise.

Read moreDetails
People who use OnlyFans tend to get smarter about sex, study suggests
Relationships and Sexual Health

Teens as young as 12 see OnlyFans as an appealing alternative to traditional work, study finds

August 2, 2025

A qualitative study involving Spanish adolescents found that many minors are familiar with OnlyFans and view it as a realistic source of income. The study raises concerns about how media exposure shapes adolescent perceptions of sexuality, gender, and economic opportunity.

Read moreDetails
Psilocybin helped aging mice not just live longer but also “look better” in groundbreaking new study
Political Psychology

Congressional speeches have shifted away from evidence-based rhetoric

July 31, 2025

A new study analyzing over eight million congressional speeches reveals a sharp decline in evidence-based language since the 1970s, raising concerns about rising political polarization, legislative gridlock, and growing income inequality in the United States.

Read moreDetails
Psilocybin helped aging mice not just live longer but also “look better” in groundbreaking new study
Social Psychology

Landmark study sheds light on the psychological roots of incel beliefs and behaviors

July 31, 2025

The most comprehensive study of incels to date finds that loneliness, depression, and belief in misogynistic ideologies play a stronger role in fostering harmful attitudes than online activity or far-right politics, challenging popular assumptions about this controversial subculture.

Read moreDetails
How psychopathy connects alexithymia to decisions that sacrifice others
Psychopathy

How psychopathy connects alexithymia to decisions that sacrifice others

July 29, 2025

A new study finds that people with low emotional awareness tend to make more utilitarian moral decisions—but only when psychopathic traits are also present. The findings reveal how emotional detachment and empathy deficits interact in shaping difficult moral choices.

Read moreDetails
Narcissism is associated with higher aggression in combat athletes, study finds
Narcissism

Narcissism is associated with higher aggression in combat athletes, study finds

July 29, 2025

A new study of combat sports athletes in Turkey has found that narcissistic personality traits are linked to higher levels of aggression, regardless of gender, age, or experience—suggesting a stable psychological influence that may shape behavior in competitive fighting environments.

Read moreDetails
Systematic review finds causal association between childhood maltreatment and mental health problems
Evolutionary Psychology

New psychology research challenges influential theory linking childhood poverty to risk-taking

July 28, 2025

Growing up poor might slightly influence how adults respond to threats, but a large replication study found much weaker effects than past research suggested. The results call into question earlier claims about poverty, risk-taking, and decision-making.

Read moreDetails
Cross-party friendships are shockingly rare in the United States, study suggests
Political Psychology

Cross-party friendships are shockingly rare in the United States, study suggests

July 27, 2025

Most American friendships happen between people who share similar political beliefs, according to new research. But when political disagreement does exist between friends, it’s associated with less negative views of political opponents—even if the friendships themselves are a little less satisfying.

Read moreDetails

STAY CONNECTED

LATEST

RFK Jr. claims major vaccine safety study is fatally flawed — is he right?

Voice pitch influences who we trust with money

Teens as young as 12 see OnlyFans as an appealing alternative to traditional work, study finds

Single dose of CBD reduces alcohol craving and brain reactivity in alcoholics

Simple micro‑actions can boost psychological well‑being, new research suggests

People with higher intelligence make more accurate predictions about their lifespan

Microplastics found to obstruct brain blood vessels in troubling neuroscience study

Scientists map the visual patterns people use when evaluating others’ bodies

         
       
  • Contact us
  • Privacy policy
  • Terms and Conditions
[Do not sell my information]

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In

Add New Playlist

Subscribe
  • My Account
  • Cognitive Science Research
  • Mental Health Research
  • Social Psychology Research
  • Drug Research
  • Relationship Research
  • About PsyPost
  • Contact
  • Privacy Policy