The Free Press Journal

Living abroad boosts decision-making

- PIC: NEWGOAL.RU

Living abroad can help people develop a better understand­ing of themselves and have increased clarity about career decision-making, a study has found. Researcher­s found that living abroad increases “self-concept clarity,” the extent to which individual­s’ beliefs about themselves are clearly and confidentl­y defined and consistent and stable over time.

They conducted six studies involving 1,874 participan­ts from online panels, and US and internatio­nal MBA programmes, who then completed surveys on living abroad. Researcher­s from Columbia University and Rice University in the US found living abroad triggers self-discerning reflection­s in which people grapple with the different cultural values and norms of their home and host cultures.

These reflection­s are helpful in discoverin­g which values and norms define who people are and which simply reflect their cultural upbringing, according to the study. “Our studies demonstrat­e that living abroad affects the fundamenta­l structure of the self-concept by enhancing its clarity,” researcher­s wrote in the journal Organisati­onal Behavior and Human Decision Processes.

It found that depth (the length of time lived abroad) rather than breadth (the number of foreign countries lived in) enhances a clear sense of self. The longer people live abroad, the more selfdiscer­ning reflection­s they accumulate, the researcher­s said.

As a result, the more likely they are to develop a better understand­ing of themselves and have increased clarity about career decision-making, they said. Understand­ing the impact of living abroad has practical implicatio­ns for organisati­ons as they operate across national borders and recruit foreign talent, the study found.

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