Publikacja:
The Relationship between Personality, Numeracy Abilities and Managerial Decision-Making
Data
2025
Artykuł
Ładowanie...
Pliki
Nazwa pliku 05_Scibirowski.pdf
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Licencja
Cytowanie
Michał Ścibirowski. (2025). The Relationship between Personality, Numeracy Abilities and Managerial Decision-Making. Collective and Individual Decisions, 37(1), 81–97. https://doi.org/10.7206/cid.3071-7973.10
Abstrakt
The study investigates how personality and numeracy abilities predict performance across
three facets of decision-making competence (DMC) among managers. It addresses a timely
and important topic at the intersection of individual differences and managerial decision-making.
The analysis is based on data collected from 80 managers enrolled in Executive EMBA
programs at the Wroclaw University of Economics and Business. Participants completed
validated research tools, including the Polish Ten-Item Personality Inventory (TIPI-PL), the
Berlin Numeracy Test (BNT), and three subscales of the Adult Decision-Making Competence
(ADMC) framework: Applying Decision Rules (DR), Consistency in Risk Perception (RP), and
Resistance to Sunk Costs (SC). The research utilized correlation analyses to assess the relationships
between personality traits, numeracy abilities, and decision-making competence.
Moderation analyses examined whether numeracy abilities moderated the effect of personality
on decision-making competence. I found significant positive correlations between numeracy
abilities and all three facets of decision-making competence, with the strongest effect
observed for resistance to sunk costs. In contrast, personality showed little predictive power,
with only openness to experience demonstrating a modest correlation with decision-making
competence. Moderation analyses revealed that numeracy abilities significantly moderated
the relationship between extraversion and applying decision rules and also moderated the relationship
between agreeableness and consistency in risk perception. Other interactions were
marginal or non-significant. Although a relatively small sample size limits the findings’ generalizability,
the analysis offers meaningful insights into the relationship between numeracy,
personality, and managerial decision-making competence. The results highlight the relevance
of numeracy in managerial decision-making and its potential role in managerial development.