How and when does witnessing incivility lead to psychological distress in family-owned bank employees?

被引:0
作者
Aftab, Shafaq [1 ]
Saleem, Irfan [2 ]
Abu Mansor, Nur Naha [2 ]
机构
[1] Univ Cent Punjab, UCP Business Sch, Lahore, Pakistan
[2] Sohar Univ, Fac Business, Sohar, Oman
关键词
Social exchange theory; Family-owned firms; Self-esteem; Pakistan; Emerging market; Employee silence; SELF-ESTEEM; JOB-PERFORMANCE; WORKPLACE INCIVILITY; WORK; CONSEQUENCES; RESOURCES; SILENCE; STRESS; HEALTH; IMPACT;
D O I
10.1108/APJBA-06-2023-0279
中图分类号
F [经济];
学科分类号
02 ;
摘要
PurposeDrawing upon social exchange theory, this study investigates how witnessed incivility is related to psychological distress for employees. In addition, scholars dug deep into the potential moderating effect of self-esteem that links witnessed incivility, employee silence and psychological distress.Design/methodology/approachIn data were obtained from 292 bankers at family-owned banks. In this work, data analysis was performed using Smart-PLS covariance-based SEM version 4.FindingsThe study results indicate that employee silence mediates witnessed incivility and psychological distress. Findings also suggest that high self-esteem can mitigate the harmful effects of witnessed incivility, indirectly causing silence and psychological distress among employees.Practical implicationsFamily-owned bank management should encourage employees to speak up, demonstrate self-esteem and share their concerns. Thus, reducing witnessed incivility increases well-being, stress, and mental health in Pakistani family-owned enterprises which operate in diverse industries.Originality/valueIn the context of family-owned banks, our study adds context and theory to the existing body of knowledge by illuminating the underlying process that relates incivility with psychological distress By exploring the use of social exchange theory.
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页码:514 / 541
页数:28
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