Measurement possibilities of motivations and attitudes influencing the formation of unethical business behavior – the effect of self-esteem on the black economy
Dobos, Piroska
Takács-György, Katalin
Szikora, Péter
2025-08-27T07:06:02Z
2025-08-27T07:06:02Z
2018
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14044/32805
In recent years, more research has found that values, societal norms and attitudes
differ from country to country and that these differences have a measurable impact on
economic behavior. The unethical business behavior and the causes of the hidden economy
are examined extensively through multiple research methods. Generally, the shadow
economy can be measured in two ways: micro-level surveys, questionnaires, interviews, or
indirect approaches such as demand for currency and hidden variables, using
macroeconomic indicators. Several studies deal with the relationship between money and
self-esteem, stating that low self-esteem and the development of criminal behavior are
typical among limited economic prospects. The purpose of the research is to compile a
questionnaire that examines unethical business behavior, including the reasons for the
development of a black economy from a business psychologist’s view, based on the
Rosenberg self-esteem used in international research to measure self-esteem. The results of
the trial queries are presented in this study.
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Measurement possibilities of motivations and attitudes influencing the formation of unethical business behavior – the effect of self-esteem on the black economy
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Open access
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Óbudai Egyetem
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2018. Április 27-28.
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Budapest
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Keleti Károly Gazdasági Kar
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Óbudai Egyetem
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Társadalomtudományok - közgazdaságtudományok
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self-esteem
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pilot-survey
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rosenberg self-esteem scale
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shadow economy
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Konferenciaközlemény
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MEB '18 Proceedings
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local.tempfieldCollections
Könyvrészletek
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7.
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Kiadói változat
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15 p.
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MEB 16th International Conference on Management, Enterprise and Branchmarking