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To cite this article: Seok-Beom Choi, Hokey Min, Hye-Young Joo & Han-Byul Choi (2017)
Assessing the impact of green supply chain practices on firm performance in the Korean
manufacturing industry, International Journal of Logistics Research and Applications, 20:2,
129-145, DOI: 10.1080/13675567.2016.1160041
Download by: [Chung Ang University] Date: 05 April 2017, At: 19:30
INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF LOGISTICS: RESEARCH AND APPLICATIONS, 2017
VOL. 20, NO. 2, 129–145
http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/13675567.2016.1160041
1. Introduction
Over the last decade, the planet Earth has suffered from a rare cycle of unprecedented heat waves,
cold spells, droughts, floods, and wildfires. For example, the summer of 2012 was the warmest sum-
mer on record, whereas the winter of 2014 was the coldest winter on record for the USA. Many sus-
pect that this extreme weather pattern is a vital sign of climate changes induced by human activities.
In particular, the emission of harmful carbon dioxide into the air is considered the main culprit for
these climate changes. As a matter of fact, the level of atmospheric carbon dioxide reached nearly 380
parts per million in 2014, which was the highest record for 650,000 years of this planet’s history
(NASA 2015). This rapid rise in the carbon dioxide level in the air is attributed to human activities
associated with travel (use of vehicles), waste disposal, product manufacturing, and energy creation.
Recognising a link between human activities (especially industrial activities) and environmental
degradation, a growing number of today’s customers have begun to pay more attention to the
firm’s environmental commitment than ever before and view it as the firm’s strength. This changed
attitude of customers has prompted firms to consider leveraging their environmental friendliness as
the major selling point. However, the dilemma of the firm’s environmental commitment lies in the
fact that the firm’s environmental friendliness rarely comes free and its payoffs are not clearly
known.
To deal with this dilemma, a series of attempts have been made to assess the impact of environ-
mental (environment-friendly) management on the firm’s performance. The focal point of these
attempts is to determine whether or not environmental management is worthy of investment and
a managerial focus. For example, Klassen and McLaughlin (1996) discovered a strong link between
the firm’s environmental management initiatives and its financial performance, as measured by stock
market performance. Similarly, Melnyk, Sroufe, and Calantone (2003) observed that the extent/
maturity of the firm’s environmental management system (EMS) was directly correlated with its per-
formance, as expressed by perceived cost saving, lead time reduction, product quality improvement,
market position improvement, and corporate reputation enhancement. Later, Montabon, Sroufe,
and Narasimhan (2007) confirmed that the firm’s environmental management practices such as
remanufacturing, environment-friendly product design, and surveillance of the market for environ-
mental innovation were positively associated with the firm’s performance, as expressed by sales
growth and return on investment. A plethora of other studies including the ones conducted by Flor-
ida (1996), Berry and Rondinelli (1998), Claver et al. (2007), Yang, Hong, and Modi (2011), Schrettle
et al. (2014), and Lannelongue, Gonzalez-Benito, and Gonzalez-Benito (2015) verified the link
between the firm’s environmental management practices and its performance.
While there is little doubt that a firm’s commitment to environmental management practices
could lead to its performance improvement, the aforementioned literature rarely explained which
particular environmental management practices or strategies were more effective in improving
the firm’s performance. More importantly, the aforementioned prior literature did not examine
how the collected environmental management efforts of multiple firms belonging to the same supply
chain network affected those firms’ performance. Recognising the need for such examination, Zhu
and Sarkis (2004) looked into the potential relationship between the adoption of green supply chain
management (GSCM) practices such as internal and external environmental management, ISO
14000 certification, investment recovery, and eco-design and the firm’s operating performance
such as cost control. Generally speaking, GSCM is referred to as an incorporation of environ-
ment-friendly initiatives into every aspect of supply chain activities encompassing sourcing, product
design and development, manufacturing, transportation, packaging, storage, retrieval, disposal, and
post-sales services including end-of-product life management (Min and Kim 2012). Based on the
empirical study of Chinese manufacturers, Zhu and Sarkis (2004) found that firms having higher
levels (more mature stage) of GSCM practices tended to reap the economic benefits in terms of
some operational cost savings (e.g. decrease in environmental compliance cost), while increasing
other operating costs (e.g. increase in costs of purchasing environment-friendly materials). This find-
ing was expected, but they also investigated the moderating effects of both quality management and
just-in-time manufacturing practices on the firm’s operational performance. They discovered that in
some instances firms adopting GSCM practices along with quality management practices could
benefit more due to the positive moderating effect of quality management practices, whereas Just
In Time (JIT) manufacturing practices could hurt the positive influence of GSCM practices. Follow-
ing suit, a number of other studies (Zhu, Sarkis, and Geng 2005; Vachon and Klassen 2006; Chien
and Shih 2007; Zhu and Sarkis 2007; Shang, Lu, and Li 2010; Youn et al. 2011; Chan et al. 2012;
Green et al. 2012; Zhu, Sarkis, and Lai 2012a, 2012b; Abareshi and Molla 2013; Zhu, Sarkis, and
Lai 2013; Choi and Hwang 2015; Dubey and Gunasekaran 2015; Laari et al. 2016) examined the
relationship between GSCM practices and their adopters’ performance to confirm the influence of
GSCM practices on firm performance.
Although a vast majority of the existing literature reported the positive influence of GSCM prac-
tices on organisational performance as summarised in Table 1, we should not be blindsided by its
potential adverse impacts summarised in Table 1. That is to say, the undisciplined adoption of
GSCM practices without formulating wise implementation strategies can not only undermine
their effectiveness, but also inflict damages to the firm’s competitiveness and supply chain
INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF LOGISTICS: RESEARCH AND APPLICATIONS 131
Technical . Greater motivation for the use of innovative . More time to develop new products
performance technology that is needed to develop
environment-friendly products
Economic . Reduced material cost by using energy efficient . Greater initial investment in environmental
performance materials and/or reused/recycled materials management initiatives
. Reduced disposal cost by decreasing the . Cost of environmental certifications (e.g. ISO
sources of hazardous materials and wastes 14000/14001)
. Greater revenue-generating opportunities with . Higher cost of buying environment-friendly
environmentally conscious customers materials, components, and products from a
. Reduced penalties for the violation of smaller pool of green suppliers
environmental laws and regulations
Regulatory . Compliances with stricter domestic and . Different environmental standards and rules
compliance international regulations will foster the positive across the different countries will put a strain on
corporate image of the firm the firm’s global supply chain activities
coordination. With this in mind, this paper aims to discern the most appropriate GSCM strategy by
classifying various types of GSCM practice options into distinctive clusters and then identifying the
winning formula among them. This paper also checks to see whether or not the firm’s organisational
profile such as firm size can amplify the impact of chosen GSCM practices on the firm’s operational
performance. Put simply, this paper attempts to answer two fundamental research questions:
(1) Do firms have choices of distinctive GSCM practice types? What motivates those practices?
(2) Does the extent of the impact of GSCM practices on the firm’s operational performance differ
depending on the firm’s chosen types of GSCM practices?
2. Research design
Due in part to scarce natural resources, the Government of South Korea (Korea hereafter) has long
been known for its export-driven economic policy. To sustain such a policy, Korea encouraged its
multinational firms to comply with the clauses of the Free Trade Agreement with foreign countries
including the USA and Europe. One of those increasingly important clauses is strict adherence to
international environmental rules and standards. In fact, the Korea Ministry of Commerce, Industry,
and Energy (KMOCIE) launched the Development of and Support for Environmental Technology
Act of 1994 and enacted the Act on the Promotion of the Conversion into Environmentally-Friendly
Industrial Infrastructure in 1995 to promote cleaner production technology, foster environment-
friendly facilities, and transfer and disseminate the know-how of large firms’ environmental manage-
ment initiatives to small- and medium-sized enterprises. In 2003, the Korean government
established the policy to expand environmental management initiatives throughout the entire supply
chain. Its main policy goal was to improve the Korean supplier’s environmental performance by soli-
difying a relationship between the focal company (i.e. buying firm) and its Korean supplier. For
instance, Finland-based Nokia required its Korean part suppliers to comply with its environmental
standards. Similarly, Sony demanded that its Korean component manufacturers adhere to Sony-
specific environmental standards that only allowed a limited amount of hazardous materials such
as cadmium and lead for its components. These examples illustrate that the Korean firm’s ability
132 S.-B. CHOI ET AL.
to meet stricter environmental standards has become the most important prerequisite for joining the
global supply chain network. The evidence of such ability includes certification by ISO 14001, the
government-induced Environment-Friendly Company Designation System, and the recent Low Car-
bon Product Certificate System which took effect in November 2011, as summarised in Table 2. This
government-induced certification led to a gradual increase in the number of Korean firms that met
ISO 14001 standards as shown in Figure 1.
Although environmental certification may have helped Korean firms meet order-qualifying cri-
teria for their buyers, it still would not give Korean firms a competitive advantage over their rivals
for securing the business contracts which mandate environmental compliance. Thus, Korean firms
are pressured to formulate more aggressive environmental strategies as their competitive differentia-
tor. In other words, the implementation of GSCM seems to be driven by the firm’s desire or long-
term strategic goal to stay competitive in the global market rather than the firm’s consciousness of
corporate social responsibility (CSR) (Park and Ghauri 2015). A strategic dilemma of such strategies
is created by the fact that those strategies necessitate a substantial investment in environment-
friendly manufacturing technology and equipment, not to mention facility upgrades and employee
training programmes. Particularly for small- or medium-sized Korean firms, this dilemma is known
to be one of the biggest stumbling blocks for embracing proactive environmental management
initiatives (BISD 2006). As such, we theorise that if a firm is convinced that benefits gained from
the firm’s environmental management such as GSCM can outweigh its investment expenditure, it
is highly likely that the firm will adopt environmental management initiatives such as GSCM prac-
tices. This theory is analogous to the well-known prospect theory introduced by Kahneman and
Tversky (1979). The prospect theory postulates that people tend to value outcomes that are obtained
with certainty more than the ones that are merely probable or risky (Kahneman and Tversky 1979;
Tversky and Kahneman 1992).
In addition, with a greater role of the government in an export-driven economy such as Korea,
coercive pressures mainly originating from the government can be a catalyst for the firm’s adop-
tion of environmental management practices (Rivera 2004). Likewise, both peer pressures from
industry rivals and social normative pressures from environment-conscious customers may
force the firm to adopt environmental management practices (Christmann and Taylor 2001;
Ball and Craig 2010; Sarkis, Zhu, and Lai 2011). Institutional theory describes how external press-
ures affect a firm to adopt an organisational practice. Put simply, the institutional theory under-
scores the dependence of a modern organisation on its social, political, and historical
environments which tend to shape the habit, culture, and custom of the individual organisation.
In other words, higher order factors such as institutional (external) pressure affect the organis-
ational behaviour in such a way that the organisation, faced with the new problem, tends to
use its accustomed old solution regardless of whether it actually works (Scott 1995; Dacin, Good-
stein, and Scott 2002). Therefore, institutional theory can be employed to examine how firms
resolve environmental issues under external pressures (Jennings and Zandbergen 1995). Since
the firm’s reaction to these external pressures and its subsequent motivation may vary depending
on the firm’s organisational culture, strategic orientation (e.g. marketing angles), and channel
power, we attempted to classify GSCM practices into four distinctive types: (1) customer-driven;
(2) opportunity-driven; (3) regulation-driven; and (4) competitor-driven GSCM practices. To
elaborate, customer-driven GSCM practices are based on the business strategy which employs
GSCM as a marketing tool to respond to increased customer demand for green (environment-
friendly) products and thus improve the firm’s performance with greater sales revenue (Fynes,
Burca, and Voss 2005; Chien and Shih 2007; Srivastava 2007; Zhu and Sarkis 2007). On the
other hand, opportunity-driven GSCM practices aim at changing the customer purchase behav-
iour by influencing the level of customer preferences for green products rather than passively
responding to the environmental need expressed by customers. According to Kumar, Scheer,
and Kotler (2000), firms that initiate strategic innovation and change the rules of competition
often create greater market opportunities. Unlike these two GSCM practices which are triggered
by internal organisational motives, both regulation-driven and competitor-driven GSCM practices
are heavily influenced by external entities such as government agencies and industry rivals. Regu-
lation-driven GSCM practices are intended to comply with international environmental rules
enacted by the Montreal Protocol, the Climatic Change Convention, the Basel Convention, the
Convention on Biological Diversity, and the European Union’s RoHS (Restriction of the use of
Hazardous Substances in electrical and electronic equipment) which often work as non-tariff
trade barriers. Finally, competitor-driven GSCM practices are motivated by the firm’s conscious
effort to stay competitive in the market under increased industry peer pressure for adopting
environmental management initiatives (Bergh 2002). Based on these classification schemes, we
theorise that the firm can take different forms of GSCM practices depending on their strategic
orientation and organisational characteristics, and different choices of GSCM practices may
have influenced the firm’s performance to a varying extent.
With this in mind, this paper attempts to identify the most appropriate GSCM practice options
for Korean firms of different sizes by assessing the impact of those options on the Korean firm’s oper-
ational performance such as manufacturing and marketing performance.
practices. In other words, we posit that the firm’s use of particular types of GSCM practices can sig-
nificantly influence the firm’s operational performance (especially manufacturing and marketing
performance). To verify these propositions, we carried out four steps of data analysis procedures
summarised in Figure 2. We started conducting exploratory factor analysis (EFA) to check the stat-
istical validity of four types of GSCM practices that were identified from prior literature. Then, we
conducted cluster analysis to identify any common denominators (characteristics) within each type
of GSCM practices. The cluster analysis is followed by a cross-tabulation of clusters and an extraction
of nuances from each cluster with respect to firm size. In the final step, we performed a one-way
analysis of variance (ANOVA) test to see if there is any difference in firm performance depending
upon the choice of a particular GSCM practice.
assumptions regarding normality (Kline 2005). As shown in Table 4, these data do not violate nor-
mality, since no variable was found to exceed standard boundaries for excessive skewness or kurtosis.
In addition to normality testing, we checked to see if there were statistical outliers in the overall dis-
tribution. Outliers were identified by measuring the Mahalanobis Distance. The estimated Mahala-
nobis Distance indicates that p-value should be smaller than 0.005 or 0.001 to achieve statistical
significance which is much stricter than the commonly used level of significance (α) of .05 or .01
(Hair et al. 2006). Two cases of outliers were identified and excluded from the data analysis.
greater than .6, indicating internal validity for all items. Also, with an exception of one, all the com-
munality values are greater than .5, indicating that a majority of the factors can be explained by the
distribution of indicators within them. The eigenvalues of the factors were 2.114, 1.830, 1.606, and
1.996, respectively, and the items provided explanatory power rates of 17.618%, 16.630%, 15.246%,
and 13.382%, respectively. Cronbach’s α values for the factors ranged from .652 to .718, indicating
fair to good reliability for each of the items included in the respective factors. Although the accep-
table value of Cronbach’s α typically ranges from .70 to .95, a lower value of Cronbach’s α could be
due to a low number of items (no more than five questions for each construct in our study), poor
interrelatedness between items, or heterogeneous constructs. For exploratory analysis, the use of
measurement scales with a lower threshold such as Cronbach’s α value between .60 and .70 still
can be used (Nunnally 1978; Nunnally and Bernstein 1994).
Following the same procedure as described above, we conducted the EFA for the outcome vari-
ables related to firm performance. The KMO value of .670 was found to be acceptable, indicating no
problem with the factor analysis. The Bartlett Test of Sphericity was also found to be significant (with
a χ 2 value of 345.454, p < 0.001). This result indicates that the correlation matrix associated with the
population is not a unit matrix. From the EFA result, we confirmed that dependent variables have
two common factors: manufacturing and marketing performance. As summarised in Table 6, all fac-
tor loadings were above .7 and all communality values exceeded .5, indicating that all extracted items
are valid. Finally, the eigenvalues of the factors are 2.039 and 1.782, respectively, and the items pro-
vided explanatory power rates of 33.976%, and 29.696%, respectively. Cronbach’s α value for the
manufacturing performance factor was .752, while Cronbach’s α for marketing performance was
.654. These results indicate that the factors achieve good reliability. Thus, the items used to measure
the factors that comprise independent and dependent variables are deemed valid and reliable.
After discovering the four dimensions of GSCM practices via EFA, we attempted to classify
responding firms into each category of the groups according to the similarity of their environmental
management practices. For this attempt, we employed a non-hierarchical k-means clustering
method, which is designed to classify a given data set through a certain predetermined number of
clusters (assume k clusters a priori) (Aldenderfer and Blashfield 1984). In a strict sense, factor analy-
sis is different from cluster analysis in that the former classifies variables into different dimensions
138 S.-B. CHOI ET AL.
with respect to their homogeneity, while the latter classifies variables into different groups with
respect to their degree of homogeneity within groups and heterogeneity between groups. Despite
such a difference, cluster analysis can complement factor analysis for classification purposes (Lee
and Lim 2011). Thus, as shown in Table 7, we experimented with a different set of cluster numbers
ranging from two to five using the k-means clustering algorithm to determine how many clusters
would produce the best fit for the given data. These experiments also aimed at balancing the
group of responding firms and examining whether the four types of GSCM practices made any stat-
istical sense. When we experimented with two or three clusters, the case distribution was imbalanced
with the uneven (i.e. disproportionally large or small) number of firms belonging to one of the cat-
egories. On the other hand, when five clusters were formed, the case distribution turned out to be
relatively balanced. However, clusters 1 and 2 can be classified into the same type, since their two
largest centroid values belonged to the same column (type). Similarly, both clusters 3 and 5 can
be classified into the same type. This result indicates that five cluster categories would not produce
a meaningful classification scheme. Among these various classifications, it appears that four clusters
make most sense in terms of a case distribution balance and separation from one another. Also, four
clusters are sufficiently large enough to identify distinctive GSCM practices, while being small
enough to avoid redundancy and overlap among these clusters. Although discerning the distinctive
characteristics of these clusters (factors) is always challenging due to the potential presence of unob-
servable variables (e.g. management styles, business philosophy, and organisational culture) which
may influence GSCM practices, the interpretation of four clusters in terms of the firm’s GSCM dri-
vers (i.e. customer-driven, opportunity-driven, regulation-driven, and competitor-driven) best rep-
resents the responding firms’ GSCM profiles.
After verifying the presence of four clusters (i.e. four distinctive types of GSCM practices), we
attempted to discern the characteristics of each cluster of responding firms. Our test result of cluster
analysis summarised in Table 8 shows that three groups of Korean firms tended to use more than one
GSCM practice, while one group employed only the regulation-driven GSCM practice judging from
the centroid values. For example, the GSCM practice of cluster 3 seemed to be driven by both regu-
latory and competitive pressures as implied by the relatively high centroid values in the regulation-
driven type (5.95) and competitor-driven type (5.64). Also, notice that, with an exception of cluster 2,
the firm’s three other clusters of GSCM practices are driven by pressure from its competitors. This
implies that a majority of responding Korean firms are motivated to adopt GSCM practices due to
peer pressure. To go one step further, we checked to see if firm size had anything to do with the firm’s
choice of particular GSCM practices. Accordingly, a χ 2 test was performed after the cross-tabulation
of clusters as presented in Table 9. The result indicates that more than half (55%) of the responding
firms which performed opportunity- and competitor-driven GSCM practices turned out to be small
firms with fewer than 100 employees. Also, approximately one-third (31 out of 95) of small firms
with fewer than 100 employees tended to use the GSCM practice, due to the government regulatory
pressure. On the other hand, none of the large firms (i.e. those with greater than 500 employees) was
driven by market opportunities when they decided to adopt GSCM practices, while a majority of
large firms (70.5%, 79 out of 112) are sensitive to their peer pressure. To summarise, small firms
which have less than 100 employees and large ones with greater than 500 employees tended to
show more distinctive GSCM practices driven by certain factors.
Finally, to validate the second research propositions we made earlier, we conducted a one-way
ANOVA to see if a choice of a particular type of GSCM practice can make a difference in the
firm’s manufacturing and marketing performance. In particular, to examine whether there is a stat-
istically significant difference across the four clusters, a multiple comparison method was used to
look for any specific differences between pairs of clusters. Both Scheffe and Bonferroni methods
were used to make multiple pairwise comparisons among the four clusters. Results shown in
Table 10 indicated that there was no significant difference in manufacturing performance between
clusters 1 and 2 at α = .05. However, cluster 1 was significantly different from both clusters 3 and 4 in
terms of its manufacturing performance. That is to say, the choice of a particular type of GSCM prac-
tice will matter to the firm’s manufacturing performance. Especially, as shown in Table 11, the firms
using opportunity/competitor-driven GSCM practices tended to do better than those using regu-
lation/competitor-driven or competitor/customer-driven GSCM practices in terms of their manu-
facturing performance. A possible explanation for this tendency is that opportunity-driven firms
were more proactive in leveraging GSCM practices than regulation/competitor-driven or competi-
tor/customer-driven firms, in that the former’s motivation came voluntarily from internal manage-
ment decisions, while the latter’s primary motives for adopting GSCM practices were originated
140 S.-B. CHOI ET AL.
from external pressure. On the other hand, the results summarised in Tables 10 and 11 showed that
the firm’s choice of particular GSCM practices had no bearing on its marketing performance.
study derived four types of GSCM practices with respect to factors influencing CSR (especially
environment-friendly supply chain practices). We found that the surveyed firms’ GSCM practices
were motivated by four distinctive factors: (1) customer, (2) internal management, (3) government
regulations, and (4) industry peer (competitor) pressure. It is also noted that the surveyed firms were
affected by more than one motivating factor (e.g. a combination of regulatory and competitive
pressure) when adopting GSCM practices. Whatever the combination of these multiple factors
might be, a majority of the firms seemed to be affected by competitive peer pressure when employing
GSCM practices. Furthermore, we found that the firm’s motive for GSCM practices varied
142 S.-B. CHOI ET AL.
depending on its size which reflected its resource level. In particular, small firms tended to be more
sensitive to environmental regulations than the others. These findings implied that small firms could
be more vulnerable to penalties resulting from non-compliance with government regulations than
the others, due to their limited resources. On the other hand, it is somewhat surprising to find
that none of the large firms recognised GSCM practices as a key selling point. In other words,
these large firms tended to employ GSCM practices not because of their voluntary wills, but because
of external pressure or as part of their order-qualifying criteria.
Second, according to the prospect theory proposed by Kahneman and Tversky (1979), the firm
may choose a certain decision (or strategy) based on the potential value of losses and gains instead
of actual outcomes. By a similar analogy, we surmised that the firm’s decision to use GSCM practices
would be affected by its perceived positive impact on the firm’s performance. As such, we investi-
gated whether or not the firm’s GSCM practices led to improved manufacturing and/or marketing
performance. We discovered that the firm’s GSCM practices affected the firm’s manufacturing per-
formance in a positive way, but did not necessarily improve its marketing performance. For example,
thanks to the high level of environmental standards set by the Korean government as compared to
the neighbouring emerging economies (e.g. China, Malaysia, Indonesia, and Vietnam), Korean man-
ufacturing firms irrespective of their size are known to be more uniform in implementing environ-
ment-friendly practices and subsequently more competitive in the era of green growth (Heo 2013;
Kim et al. 2014; Kim and Thurbon 2015). In particular, we observed that firms using opportu-
nity/competitor-driven GSCM practices tended to do better than those using regulation/competi-
tor-driven or competitor/customer-driven GSCM practices in terms of their manufacturing
performance. That is to say, the firm which viewed GSCM practices as a key selling point and
thus was voluntarily motivated to use GSCM practices tended to reap a greater benefit of those prac-
tices. From a corporate strategic standpoint, we suggest that the firm should take the more proactive
stance than before to fully exploit the benefits of GSCM practices.
convince its stakeholders of the worthiness of GSCM practices. From a theoretical standpoint, this
paper attempted to make some sense out of institutional and prospect theories for CSRs and then to
explain what drove GSCM practices. As such, one of the important theoretical contributions of this
paper is the establishment of institutional and prospect theories for illuminating the firm’s motives
behind employing the GSCM practices and the development of research tools for assessing the
impact of GSCM drivers on firm performance. The theoretical foundation built by this study will
help the firm formulate a winning GSCM strategy and leverage it as a major competitive differen-
tiator in the global marketplace. Despite these novel attempts, this study should be further extended
to include the following aspects:
(1) The firm’s performance should be measured using actual performance outcomes in lieu of the
respondent’s perceived performance.
(2) The firm’s organisational profile may include other variables such as the firm’s industry sector
and channel power in the supply chain to better gauge the extent of its influence on the firm’s
motives behind GSCM practices.
(3) The sample should be increased by adding firms representing other countries such as the USA
and Japan.
(4) Based on current research propositions, more detailed hypotheses should be developed and
then tested using alternative data analysis such as confirmatory factor analysis.
Disclosure statement
No potential conflict of interest was reported by the authors.
Funding
This work was supported by the National Research Foundation Grant funded by the Korean Government. (NRF-
2014S1A2A2028564).
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