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Employee wellbeing, control and organizational commitment

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Employee wellbeing, control and organizational commitment. / Jain, Ajay Kumar; Giga, Sabir; Cooper, Cary.
In: Leadership and Organization Development Journal, Vol. 30, No. 3, 2009, p. 256-273.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

Jain, AK, Giga, S & Cooper, C 2009, 'Employee wellbeing, control and organizational commitment', Leadership and Organization Development Journal, vol. 30, no. 3, pp. 256-273. https://doi.org/10.1108/01437730910949535

APA

Jain, A. K., Giga, S., & Cooper, C. (2009). Employee wellbeing, control and organizational commitment. Leadership and Organization Development Journal, 30(3), 256-273. https://doi.org/10.1108/01437730910949535

Vancouver

Jain AK, Giga S, Cooper C. Employee wellbeing, control and organizational commitment. Leadership and Organization Development Journal. 2009;30(3):256-273. doi: 10.1108/01437730910949535

Author

Jain, Ajay Kumar ; Giga, Sabir ; Cooper, Cary. / Employee wellbeing, control and organizational commitment. In: Leadership and Organization Development Journal. 2009 ; Vol. 30, No. 3. pp. 256-273.

Bibtex

@article{1bdb335ea5fe4b47b116c3e9a2e609fb,
title = "Employee wellbeing, control and organizational commitment",
abstract = "Purpose– This paper aims to investigate the role of work locus of control (WLOC) as a moderator of the relationship between employee wellbeing and organizational commitment.Design/methodology/approach– The paper reports on a quantitative study of middle level executives from motor‐cycle manufacturing organizations based in Northern India. The focus of the paper is to examine the predictive ability of wellbeing and the moderating effect of WLOC in predicting organizational commitment.Findings– The results suggest that wellbeing is negatively related to conditional continuance commitment, whereby employees consider the advantages associated with continued participation and costs associated with leaving, and normative commitment, whereby employees feel they have moral obligations to remain with the organization. The presence of an external WLOC has a positive impact on the relationship. Wellbeing, as represented by a hassle‐free existence, predicts positive affective commitment with a particular organization, and internal WLOC as represented by effort influences the relationship negatively.Research limitations/implications– Although a cross‐sectional study, its findings have implications for contemporary leadership and organizational psychology research and practice, particularly with regard to understanding of employee commitment in a progressively changing environment.Originality/value– Studies examining the role of WLOC as a moderator of the relationship between wellbeing and organizational commitment are limited particularly in the context of post‐liberalization, as is the case with the manufacturing industry in India.",
keywords = "Job satisfaction, Employees, Employee behaviour, Employee involvement, India",
author = "Jain, {Ajay Kumar} and Sabir Giga and Cary Cooper",
year = "2009",
doi = "10.1108/01437730910949535",
language = "English",
volume = "30",
pages = "256--273",
journal = "Leadership and Organization Development Journal",
issn = "0143-7739",
publisher = "Emerald Group Publishing Ltd.",
number = "3",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Employee wellbeing, control and organizational commitment

AU - Jain, Ajay Kumar

AU - Giga, Sabir

AU - Cooper, Cary

PY - 2009

Y1 - 2009

N2 - Purpose– This paper aims to investigate the role of work locus of control (WLOC) as a moderator of the relationship between employee wellbeing and organizational commitment.Design/methodology/approach– The paper reports on a quantitative study of middle level executives from motor‐cycle manufacturing organizations based in Northern India. The focus of the paper is to examine the predictive ability of wellbeing and the moderating effect of WLOC in predicting organizational commitment.Findings– The results suggest that wellbeing is negatively related to conditional continuance commitment, whereby employees consider the advantages associated with continued participation and costs associated with leaving, and normative commitment, whereby employees feel they have moral obligations to remain with the organization. The presence of an external WLOC has a positive impact on the relationship. Wellbeing, as represented by a hassle‐free existence, predicts positive affective commitment with a particular organization, and internal WLOC as represented by effort influences the relationship negatively.Research limitations/implications– Although a cross‐sectional study, its findings have implications for contemporary leadership and organizational psychology research and practice, particularly with regard to understanding of employee commitment in a progressively changing environment.Originality/value– Studies examining the role of WLOC as a moderator of the relationship between wellbeing and organizational commitment are limited particularly in the context of post‐liberalization, as is the case with the manufacturing industry in India.

AB - Purpose– This paper aims to investigate the role of work locus of control (WLOC) as a moderator of the relationship between employee wellbeing and organizational commitment.Design/methodology/approach– The paper reports on a quantitative study of middle level executives from motor‐cycle manufacturing organizations based in Northern India. The focus of the paper is to examine the predictive ability of wellbeing and the moderating effect of WLOC in predicting organizational commitment.Findings– The results suggest that wellbeing is negatively related to conditional continuance commitment, whereby employees consider the advantages associated with continued participation and costs associated with leaving, and normative commitment, whereby employees feel they have moral obligations to remain with the organization. The presence of an external WLOC has a positive impact on the relationship. Wellbeing, as represented by a hassle‐free existence, predicts positive affective commitment with a particular organization, and internal WLOC as represented by effort influences the relationship negatively.Research limitations/implications– Although a cross‐sectional study, its findings have implications for contemporary leadership and organizational psychology research and practice, particularly with regard to understanding of employee commitment in a progressively changing environment.Originality/value– Studies examining the role of WLOC as a moderator of the relationship between wellbeing and organizational commitment are limited particularly in the context of post‐liberalization, as is the case with the manufacturing industry in India.

KW - Job satisfaction

KW - Employees

KW - Employee behaviour

KW - Employee involvement

KW - India

U2 - 10.1108/01437730910949535

DO - 10.1108/01437730910949535

M3 - Journal article

VL - 30

SP - 256

EP - 273

JO - Leadership and Organization Development Journal

JF - Leadership and Organization Development Journal

SN - 0143-7739

IS - 3

ER -