The Effect of Cognitive Style and
Sponsorship Bias on the
Treatment of Opportunity
Costs in Resources Allocation Decisions
H. Alfian
(Fakultas Ekonomi Universitas
Lambung Mangkurat, Banjarmasin)
Abstract
The current
research seeks to identify factors that may potentially influence the way
managers respond to opportunity costs when relevant data are not explicitly
provided. Identification of such factors should enhance our understanding of
why some managers respond to opportunity costs in ways that may be inconsistent
with normative economic theory. This information could then be used to identify
those situations in which structural and procedural precautions are necessary
to correct limitations and biases in human information processing and so ensure
the correct treatment of opportunity costs.
Disability of individual processes of perception
dimension of Jungs’ typology on research of Chenhall & Morris (1991) to
explain difference of managers’ way to making decision, lead us to research
questions are: first, which cognitive style combination have a proclivity
to incorporate implicit opportunity costs in their economic analysis? Second,
used of two dimensions of cognitive style, will project sponsorship encourage
managers to ignore negative economic signals derived from opportunity costs
that are nevertheless relevant to the resource allocation decision?
A laboratory experiment with 2x4 factorial designs was
used to investigating the effect of cognitive style on the managers’ decision
of opportunity costs in situation of absence sponsorship or not. The results
indicated that intuitive managers tended to incorporate opportunity costs in
their decisions whereas sensation individuals appeared to focus more on the
directness of the relationship between expenditure and a project to determine
the relevance of the cost. Opportunity cost
implications tended not to be identified by the sensation group. Evidence was
found that sponsorship moderated the influence of cognitive style on decision
to include opportunity costs.
Keywords: Cognitive
style, sponsorship bias, and opportunity cost
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