FRIDAY, July 30 (HealthDay News) -- Many people who aspire to
leadership actually want to help others, according to a new study
that challenges the widespread belief that most leaders are selfish
and egoistic.
A team of European researchers used economics-based games to
study the personality traits of people who choose to be leaders and
found that they were more likely to be rated as pro-social rather
than selfish. In addition, those who chose to lead typically earned
less money than those who chose to follow.
The study will be published in the journal
Personality and Individual Differences.
"Our results suggest that leadership is a way for people to be helpful and engender coordination and cooperation between others," co-author Edward Cartwright, a senior lecturer at the School of Economics at the University of Kent in England, said in a university news release.
The findings paint "a much more positive view of leadership than
is typical, and we were surprised by how clear cut the results are.
In both the games we looked at, everything points towards selfless
rather than selfish leaders. This really changes the way we think
about leaders," according to Cartwright.
"Our data supports the view that leadership emerged in human societies as a social good," co-author Mark van Vugt, of VU University Amsterdam in the Netherlands, said in the news release.
"Yet this does not mean that leaders will not abuse their power once they find themselves in charge of a group -- in fact, many do. But for every Mugabe there is a Mandela and the latter is much closer to the way we want our leaders to be: fair, inspiring and servant," he said.
More information
For more on what makes an ethical leader, check out this article
from
Harvard Business School.