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Just benefits? Employee benefits and organisational justice

Melinda Laundon (School of Management, Queensland University of Technology Business School, Brisbane, Australia)
Abby Cathcart (School of Management, Queensland University of Technology Business School, Brisbane, Australia)
Paula McDonald (School of Management, Queensland University of Technology Business School, Brisbane, Australia)

Employee Relations

ISSN: 0142-5455

Article publication date: 12 April 2019

Issue publication date: 6 June 2019

5590

Abstract

Purpose

Employee reward is central to contemporary debates about work and employment relations; and in the context of ongoing wage stagnation, benefits represent a growing proportion of total reward value. Past studies have shown that when employees perceive benefits as unfair, this has a negative impact on engagement, performance and retention. Yet no previous studies have explored the components of a benefits system that influence employees’ fairness concerns. Using organisational justice as a theoretical lens, the purpose of this paper is to examine how dimensions of an employee benefits system influence the fairness perceptions of employees.

Design/methodology/approach

This paper reports on a qualitative, inductive case study of the benefits system in a large finance and insurance company, drawing on three data sources: interviews with the company’s benefits managers, organisational documents and open-text responses from a benefits survey.

Findings

Three dimensions of the benefits system strongly influenced fairness perceptions – constraints on accessing and utilising benefits; prosocial perceptions about the fairness of benefits to third parties; and the transparency of employee benefits.

Practical implications

The study informs organisations and benefits managers about the important role of supervisors in perceived benefits usability, and how benefits may be managed and communicated to enhance employee fairness perceptions.

Originality/value

This study makes a conceptual contribution to the benefits literature through a detailed exploration of the type of organisational justice judgements that employees make about benefits; and identifying for the first time prosocial fairness concerns about the impact of benefits on third parties.

Keywords

Acknowledgements

One of the authors received support for this research through an Australian Government Research Training Programme (RTP) Scholarship.

Citation

Laundon, M., Cathcart, A. and McDonald, P. (2019), "Just benefits? Employee benefits and organisational justice", Employee Relations, Vol. 41 No. 4, pp. 708-723. https://doi.org/10.1108/ER-11-2017-0285

Publisher

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Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2019, Emerald Publishing Limited

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