Manara - Qatar Research Repository
Browse

Leadership heuristic

journal contribution
submitted on 2025-04-29, 09:29 and posted on 2025-04-29, 09:34 authored by Carina Cavalcanti, Philip J. Grossman, Elias L. KhalilElias L. Khalil

The economics literature offers at least two main explanations of why individuals adopt the heuristic of following their leader’s suggestion: First, the leader has information or a talent relevant to the task at hand and, second, the leader’s suggestion helps to reduce uncertainty and to coordinate the group on one choice. The psychology literature offers another explanation: The leader, acting as an “ethical example,” helps to increase job satisfaction, performance, and prosocial behavior. Both lines of literature, although in different ways, assume rational choice on the part of followers. Neither literature addresses the question: Would people adopt the leadership heuristic if the leader lacks any relevant information, talent advantage, ethical character, or other desirable traits? We report experimental evidence that suggests the answer is yes. In our experiment, leaders suggest the outcome of a fair “coin toss.” Leaders vary in (irrelevant) “information” and (irrelevant) “ability” possessed. Although there is no feedback after each period, we find that one-third of all the decisions of the participants heuristically follow the leader’s choice. This is surprising given that, first, the leader’s choice is irrelevant and, second, to follow it would be payoff-reducing. Payoff-reducing choices of subjects are more frequent with irrelevantly informed leaders than with irrelevantly talented leaders. Crucially, we also show that the findings are not driven by lack of understanding of random events. In short, neither the hot-hand and gambler’s fallacies nor attributes that might inspire trust/loyalty can explain subjects’ choices.

Other Information

Published in: Journal of Economic Psychology
License: https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/
See article on publisher's website: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.joep.2023.102661

History

Language

  • English

Publisher

Elsevier

Publication Year

  • 2023

License statement

This Item is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License.

Institution affiliated with

  • Doha Institute for Graduate Studies
  • School of Economics, Administration and Public Policy - DI

Related Datasets

Khalil, Elias (2023), “Leadership heuristic__Data”, Mendeley Data, V2, doi: 10.17632/4424s5pcwk.2