Cultural differences and applicants' procedural fairness perceptions: A test of a Chinese culture‐based model
Abstract
Purpose
The purpose of this paper is to examine Chinese traditionality as a predictor of applicants' procedural fairness perceptions in selection, and both its direct and indirect relationship with applicants' recommending behavior, job performance and turnover intention three to four months post hire. Traditionality, as a moderator of perceptions‐outcomes relationships, is also tested.
Design/methodology/approach
Survey data of 218 supervisor‐subordinate dyads were collected from Mainland Chinese organizations. Data were gathered in two waves, with demographic and traditionality measures taken at time 1, and supervisory ratings of performance, recommending behavior and intention to turnover taken at time 2.
Findings
One component of traditionality alone (Respect for Authority) positively predicted applicants' procedural fairness perceptions. These perceptions, in turn, predicted recommending behavior (+), job performance (+) and turnover intentions (−). There were also direct relationships between Respect for Authority and both job performance (+) and turnover intention (−). The data failed to support the moderating effect of Chinese traditionality on the relationships between procedural fairness perceptions and outcome variables.
Research limitations/implications
Despite the methodological strengths of this study, the study is cross‐sectional in nature which weakens causal inferences regarding the relationships in the theoretical model. Moreover, the paper does not investigate empirically the concrete mechanisms from Chinese traditionality to fairness perceptions and from fairness perceptions to outcome variables, since its foci are the predicting and moderating roles of Chinese traditionality.
Originality/value
The paper's findings underscore the importance of Respect for Authority as the key and only component of Chinese traditionality that predicts procedural justice perceptions and worker outcomes.
Keywords
Citation
Wang, Q., Hackett, R.D., Cui, X. and Zhang, Y. (2012), "Cultural differences and applicants' procedural fairness perceptions: A test of a Chinese culture‐based model", Chinese Management Studies, Vol. 6 No. 2, pp. 350-368. https://doi.org/10.1108/17506141211236785
Publisher
:Emerald Group Publishing Limited
Copyright © 2012, Emerald Group Publishing Limited