The Conflicting Impact of COVID-19's Health and Economic Crises on Helping

被引:39
作者
Shoss, Mindy K. [1 ]
Horan, Kristin A. [1 ]
DiStaso, Michael [1 ]
LeNoble, Chelsea A. [2 ]
Naranjo, Anthony [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Cent Florida, Dept Psychol, 4000 Cent Florida Blvd, Orlando, FL 32816 USA
[2] Embry Riddle Aeronaut Univ, Daytona Beach, FL USA
关键词
COVID-19; helping; Google Trends; work-hour insecurity; recession; QUALITATIVE JOB INSECURITY; WORK; CONSEQUENCES; DISASTER; BEHAVIOR; CONTEXT; GENDER; OCB; PSYCHOLOGY; COMMUNITY;
D O I
10.1177/1059601120968704
中图分类号
B849 [应用心理学];
学科分类号
040203 ;
摘要
Helping behaviors are considered critical for business and societal recovery in light of economic crises and natural disasters, including the COVID-19 pandemic that has both economic and health disaster elements. However, because the current COVID-19 pandemic has both of these elements, it is unclear how helping may be impacted. Economic crisis research suggests that such events are associated with less helping, whereas disaster research suggests that such events are associated with greater helping. We pair the event system theory (Morgeson, F. P., Mitchell, T. R., & Liu, D. (2015). Event system theory: An event-oriented approach to the organizational sciences. Academy of Management Review, 40(4), 515-537) with these two logics (economic downturn and disaster) to suggest that health and economic threats within the COVID-19 pandemic operate with potentially opposing forces on helping-related outcomes. To test these ideas at a macro-level, we examined internet search volume for recession, COVID-19, and interest in helping. At a micro-level, we examined the relationships between work- hour insecurity and perceived job-related COVID-19 risk-two salient COVID-19-related economic and health threats-and helping customers and coworkers. Consistent with economic crisis logic, macro-level concern about recession was negatively associated with interest in helping. Moreover, at the individual level, work-hour insecurity negatively predicted helping coworkers. Consistent with disaster logic, at the individual level, perceived job-related COVID-19 threat was positively associated with helping coworkers and negatively associated with helping customers. These findings suggest that the specific feature of the COVID-19 event system (economic versus health) and the target (organizational insiders versus outsiders) matter for shaping helping behavior. These findings have implications for helping during crises that involve economic and/or disaster elements.
引用
收藏
页码:3 / 37
页数:35
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