Psychological contract and employee attitudes The impact of firm ownership andemployment type

被引:8
|
作者
Zhang, Yuchao [1 ]
Ren, Ting [2 ]
Li, Xuanye [3 ,4 ]
机构
[1] China Construct Bank, Shanghai, Peoples R China
[2] Peking Univ, HSBC Business Sch, Beijing, Peoples R China
[3] Rutgers State Univ, Rutgers Business Sch, Newark, NJ USA
[4] Rutgers State Univ, Rutgers Business Sch, New Brunswick, NJ USA
关键词
Psychological contract; Employee attitudes; Employment type; Firm ownership; ORGANIZATION RELATIONSHIP; TEMPORARY; CHINA; PERFORMANCE; FULFILLMENT; VIOLATIONS; EXCHANGE; BREACH;
D O I
10.1108/CMS-06-2017-0171
中图分类号
C93 [管理学];
学科分类号
12 ; 1201 ; 1202 ; 120202 ;
摘要
Purpose This paper aims to investigate the Chinese employment relationship under the framework of psychological contracts. The authors explored the effects of firm ownership (in terms of state-owned and private enterprises) and employment type (in terms of permanent and temporary employees) on employee perceptions of psychological contract. In addition, the associations between fulfilled psychological contract and various dimensions of employee attitudes were examined. Design/methodology/approach The authors adopted a questionnaire as the primary instrument to investigate the impact of firm ownership and employment type on psychological contract perceptions and outcomes. The analysis was based on a Chinese sample of a size of 363 employees. Findings The results indicate that state-owned employees overall reported fewer promises (employer under-obligation promised psychological contract), while private employees tended to have more promises (mutual high obligation, employer over-obligation and quasi-spot obligation promise-based psychological contract). Permanent employees reported high fulfillment (employer over-obligation, mutual high obligation and employer under-obligation fulfilled psychological contract). In contrast, temporary employees presented many promises (mutual high obligation promised psychological contract) and low fulfillment (quasi-spot fulfilled psychological contract). In general, firm ownership had weak effects on permanent and temporary employees' perceptions of promise-based psychological contract, but no significant influence on fulfillment-based psychological contract. Moreover, psychological contract fulfillment was positively related to employees' fairness perception and job satisfaction, while negatively related to the intention to quit. The authors failed to find comprehensive statistical support for the moderating effects of firm ownership or employment type. Originality/value The study contributes to the literature through a number of ways. First, instead of psychological contract breach, the authors use psychological contract fulfillment as a direct measure to examine the relationship between psychological contract and employees' attitudes. Second, they investigate the effects of firm ownership on employment relationship under the psychological contract framework, enriching the institutional lens of the issue. Third, while majority of psychological contract studies concerning employment type concentrate on either permanent or temporary employees, the authors take both types into account. Fourth, they integrate perspectives of firm ownership and employment type. Finally, the authors perform the study in the Chinese context, which offers extra evidence to the body of psychological contract literature.
引用
收藏
页码:26 / 50
页数:25
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [31] Research on Key Employee Incentive based on Psychological Contract
    Lei, Song
    HUMAN RESOURCES MANAGEMENT IN THE KNOWLEDGE ECONOMY ERA, VOLS I AND II, 2009, : 1183 - 1187
  • [32] Management Research Of Employee Engagement Based On The Psychological Contract
    Zhu, Lan
    PROCEEDINGS OF THE 2015 3RD INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON EDUCATION, MANAGEMENT, ARTS, ECONOMICS AND SOCIAL SCIENCE, 2016, 49 : 1319 - 1323
  • [33] Employee Psychological Contract and Innovation of Human Resource Management
    Wei, Xin
    Liu, Xiaoyan
    Xiao, Shulan
    SEVENTH WUHAN INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON E-BUSINESS, VOLS I-III: UNLOCKING THE FULL POTENTIAL OF GLOBAL TECHNOLOGY, 2008, : 2784 - 2787
  • [34] The Employee Management in Modern Enterprise in View of Psychological Contract
    Xia Yayun
    HUMAN RESOURCES MANAGEMENT IN THE KNOWLEDGE ECONOMY ERA, VOLS I AND II, 2009, : 1103 - 1108
  • [35] Examining psychological contract contents in India: the employee perspective
    Aggarwal, Upasana
    Bhargava, Shivganesh
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF INDIAN CULTURE AND BUSINESS MANAGEMENT, 2011, 4 (06) : 609 - 625
  • [36] Constructing a Measure on the Employee Attributions of Psychological Contract Breach
    Chen, Guo
    PROCEEDINGS OF THE 14TH INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON INNOVATION AND MANAGEMENT, VOLS I & II, 2017, : 201 - 204
  • [37] Social exchange and psychological ownership as complementary pathways from psychological contract fulfillment to organizational citizenship behaviors
    Gardner, Donald G.
    Pierce, Jon L.
    Peng, He
    PERSONNEL REVIEW, 2021, 50 (06) : 1479 - 1494
  • [38] That wasn't our deal: A psychological contract perspective on employee responses to bullying
    Kakarika, Maria
    Gonzalez-Gomez, Helena V.
    Dimitriades, Zoe
    JOURNAL OF VOCATIONAL BEHAVIOR, 2017, 100 : 43 - 55
  • [39] The Impact of the Psychological Contract on Academics
    Sewpersad, Romona
    Ruggunan, Shaun
    Adam, Jamila K.
    Krishna, Suresh Babu Naidu
    SAGE OPEN, 2019, 9 (02):
  • [40] The impact of privatization and employee share ownership on employee commitment and citizen behaviour
    McCarthy, Dermot
    Reeves, Eoin
    Turner, Tom
    ECONOMIC AND INDUSTRIAL DEMOCRACY, 2010, 31 (03) : 307 - 326