Correlates and Predictors to Organizational Commitment in China
Abstract
Managers need to be able to understand whether the constructs of organizational commitment apply cross culturally. This study adds to a growing knowledge base regarding organizational commitment internationally, and uses workers in government controlled, mixed economy, and privately owned businesses in China’s interior. The study uses questionnaires of antecedents of commitment and tests Mowday et al’s (1979) OCQ and Meyer and Allen’s (1991) ACS, NCS, CCS. While we were are able to verify some antecedent conditions surrounding Mowday et al (1979) and Meyer and Allen’s (1991) commitment measures, we discovered the conditions surrounding commitment in persons who live outside the commercial zones may be more complicated than theory predicts. Artifacts that may modify antecedent‐commitment main include culture, language, firm ownership/control, and expectations of workers moving from government employment more market based jobs. We suggest that more study is required in relationship to conceptual space, theory development, measurement, validation, and analysis in former centrally planned and communistic countries. As is usually true in China, things are not as straightforward or simple as they seem. This study seems to verify that sentiment.
Keywords
Citation
Peterson, D.K. and Xing, Y. (2007), "Correlates and Predictors to Organizational Commitment in China", Journal of Asia Business Studies, Vol. 1 No. 2, pp. 27-36. https://doi.org/10.1108/15587890780001293
Publisher
:Emerald Group Publishing Limited
Copyright © 2007, Emerald Group Publishing Limited