分配公平与程序公平对香港员工工作结果的预测作用

Distributive and procedural justice as predictors of employee outcomes in Hong Kong

JOURNAL OF ORGANIZATIONAL BEHAVIOR · 2000
被引 188
人大 AABS 4

中文导读

研究了香港员工对分配公平和程序公平的判断如何预测工作满意度、留任意向和主管评价,发现其影响模式与美国研究结果存在差异,可能与文化因素有关。

Abstract

This study examines the extent to which employee judgments about distributive and procedural justice predict job satisfaction, intent to stay and evaluation of supervision in Hong Kong. Distributive and procedural justice each plays a role in determining work outcomes of Hong Kong employees. However, some effects of these justice variables differ from results of previous studies in the United States (U.S.). First, in previous U.S. studies, procedural justice moderates the relationship of distributive justice with evaluation of supervision, but not with job satisfaction or intent to stay. For Hong Kong employees, procedural justice moderates the effects of distributive justice on job satisfaction and intent to stay, but not on evaluation of supervision. Second, previous U.S. studies have shown that procedural justice has a larger effect on work outcomes for women, while distributive justice has larger effects on outcomes for men. For Hong Kong employees, the effects of procedural and distributive justice are about the same for men and women. Differences in the effects of distributive and procedural justice between Hong Kong and the U.S. may reflect cultural dimensions, such as collectivism/individualism and power distance, as well as the relative availability of rewards for women in the work force. Practical implications and future research directions are discussed. Copyright © 2000 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.

组织行为学人力资源管理跨文化心理学社会心理学