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Non-invariance? An Overstated Problem With Misconceived Causes

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  • Christian Welzel
  • Lennart Brunkert
  • Stefan Kruse
  • Ronald F. Inglehart

Abstract

Scholars study representative international surveys to understand cross-cultural differences in mentality patterns, which are measured via complex multi-item constructs. Methodologists in this field insist with increasing vigor that detecting “non-invariance†in how a construct’s items associate with each other in different national samples is an infallible sign of encultured in-equivalences in how respondents understand the items. Questioning this claim, we demonstrate that a main source of non-invariance is the arithmetic of closed-ended scales in the presence of sample mean disparity. Since arithmetic principles are culture-unspecific, the non-invariance that these principles enforce in statistical terms is inconclusive of encultured in-equivalences in semantic terms. Because of this inconclusiveness, our evidence reveals furthermore that non-invariance is inconsequential for the cross-cultural functioning of multi-item constructs as concerns their nomological linkages to other variables of interest. We discuss the implications of these insights for measurement validation in cross-cultural settings with large sample mean disparity.

Suggested Citation

  • Christian Welzel & Lennart Brunkert & Stefan Kruse & Ronald F. Inglehart, 2023. "Non-invariance? An Overstated Problem With Misconceived Causes," Sociological Methods & Research, , vol. 52(3), pages 1368-1400, August.
  • Handle: RePEc:sae:somere:v:52:y:2023:i:3:p:1368-1400
    DOI: 10.1177/0049124121995521
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