Montreal Gazette

Leaders’ narcissism tied to family income

- JENA MCGREGOR

Researcher­s have found links between leaders’ narcissism, worse reviews of their leadership behaviour and a surprising third factor: How much money their families had when they were growing up.

The study, published online by the Academy of Management Journal and recently highlighte­d by the Harvard Business Review, claims to be one of the first to explore a tie, if an indirect one, between leaders’ family income during childhood and their leadership behaviours later in life. At a time of increasing income inequality, says Sean Martin, an assistant professor at Boston College, it’s also part of a growing body of research that’s studying the effects of higher incomes on social behaviour.

“We’re trying to understand what it means for how people treat each other,” Martin said in an interview. How does income inequality “relate to the decisions people make in business and in leader-follower relationsh­ips? What are the effects of this growing socio-economic trend?”

Martin and his co-authors studied 229 graduates of the U.S. Military Academy who now hold army leadership positions, which allowed things like college education, current income and the leaders’ hierarchic­al level to remain standard across the study. They gathered informatio­n about the leaders’ parents’ income from their applicatio­ns to the school. They then asked them to fill out surveys that assessed their narcissism, and a larger group of their subordinat­es to answer questions about their performanc­e on a variety of leadership traits, such as showing care for others or pushing for innovation and change.

What they found was an indirect relationsh­ip between the three. The study showed a strong correlatio­n between the leaders’ parents’ income and narcissism, as well as a significan­t link between that narcissism and reviews of the leaders’ behaviour. He cautions, though, that what they found “is not causal — it’s a step-by-step chain,” Martin said. And even among the relationsh­ips they did see, they’re just saying that higher incomes were associated with more narcissism. “Are there exceptions to the rule? Of course there are.”

It’s not the only study that has attempted to look at leaders and their social class background­s. A study published late last year, for instance, found that CEOs from middle-class background­s tend to take fewer strategic risks than those who hail from wealthy or poor background­s.

Martin is quick to note that their findings shouldn’t be used as an excuse to start examining family income when it comes to choosing leaders. Rather, he says, leaders should “be careful about rewarding the people who look really flashy,” he says, and “reward people’s tendencies to help and serve and treat other people well. Make that part of your evaluation process.”

Of course, we couldn’t help but ask Martin how he thought his findings might apply to Donald Trump — the GOP presumptiv­e nominee whose father was a wealthy real estate developer himself and who certainly thinks quite highly of himself.

But Martin wouldn’t bite. “We absolutely do not intend and do not want to be making any political statement or have any political orientatio­n at all,” he said, noting they started gathering data in 2014, well before Trump announced his candidacy.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada