Employee responses to relational fulfilment and work‐life benefits: A social exchange study in the German public administration
Abstract
Purpose
Investigating employee responses to relational fulfilment of the psychological contract and work‐life benefits of a telecommuting program, this study aims to contribute to the literature on social exchange in employment.
Design/methodology/approach
The setting of the study was the German public administration. Survey data from 947 Civil Servants were analyzed in structural equation models. Analysis of mean structure was used to compare telecommuting participants (n=601) and regular workers (n=346).
Findings
Trust and affective commitment consecutively mediated between relational fulfilment of the psychological contract and organizational citizenship behavior. Members of the telecommuting program had more positive representations of social exchange, reporting higher levels of fulfilment, trust, and commitment than their peers.
Research limitations/implications
Reliance on cross‐sectional self‐report data poses a limitation. Selection effects in the quasi‐experimental design for comparing telecommuters and regular employees cannot be ruled out. Generalizability to more transactional or short‐term employment is debatable.
Originality/value
The study adds to a more integrated understanding of the psychological processes that reinforce and strengthen employee trust and commitment, thus forming the basis of the motivation to go above and beyond specified duties and reward‐contingent behavior.
Keywords
Citation
Hornung, S. and Glaser, J. (2010), "Employee responses to relational fulfilment and work‐life benefits: A social exchange study in the German public administration", International Journal of Manpower, Vol. 31 No. 1, pp. 73-92. https://doi.org/10.1108/01437721011031702
Publisher
:Emerald Group Publishing Limited
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