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Work attitudes, career success and health: evidence from China

Work attitudes, career success and health: evidence from China
Work attitudes, career success and health: evidence from China
Research on the determinants and implications of career success, and in particular on how they are related to health among Chinese workers is scarce. This research explores the impact and relevance of individual attitudes of trust and organizational citizenship behavior on objective and subjective career success, and their relevance to physical and mental health. Further, we explore the moderating role of a career system on the relationships between work attitudes and career success. Using a random sample of 10,372 people in China we used multi-level linear regression methodology to explore a mediation–moderation model based on organizational theories. We found support for the impact of organizational citizenship behaviors and trust, for both objective and subjective career success as mediators of mental and physical health, and for a career system as a moderator, with significant differences emerging between workers employed in the public and private sectors. The results are important as they shed light on the relationship between work and life attitudes on outcomes of high relevance at national level. The original contribution would be of interest to policy makers at both organizational and national level
0001-8791
248-258
Russo, M.
ae0e57e9-a232-47cf-85a6-9680cb13e415
Guo, L.
af84e9be-c4c4-4ae5-8c40-0a6e98d357c2
Baruch, Yehuda
25b89777-def4-4958-afdc-0ceab43efe8a
Russo, M.
ae0e57e9-a232-47cf-85a6-9680cb13e415
Guo, L.
af84e9be-c4c4-4ae5-8c40-0a6e98d357c2
Baruch, Yehuda
25b89777-def4-4958-afdc-0ceab43efe8a

Russo, M., Guo, L. and Baruch, Yehuda (2014) Work attitudes, career success and health: evidence from China. Journal of Vocational Behavior, 84 (3), 248-258. (doi:10.1016/j.jvb.2014.01.009).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Research on the determinants and implications of career success, and in particular on how they are related to health among Chinese workers is scarce. This research explores the impact and relevance of individual attitudes of trust and organizational citizenship behavior on objective and subjective career success, and their relevance to physical and mental health. Further, we explore the moderating role of a career system on the relationships between work attitudes and career success. Using a random sample of 10,372 people in China we used multi-level linear regression methodology to explore a mediation–moderation model based on organizational theories. We found support for the impact of organizational citizenship behaviors and trust, for both objective and subjective career success as mediators of mental and physical health, and for a career system as a moderator, with significant differences emerging between workers employed in the public and private sectors. The results are important as they shed light on the relationship between work and life attitudes on outcomes of high relevance at national level. The original contribution would be of interest to policy makers at both organizational and national level

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Guo Russo Baruch China JVB As accepted.doc - Accepted Manuscript
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More information

e-pub ahead of print date: 7 February 2014
Published date: June 2014
Organisations: Southampton Business School

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 377418
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/377418
ISSN: 0001-8791
PURE UUID: 6e09a16c-b642-4627-8e4d-dcb5af33e713
ORCID for Yehuda Baruch: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-0678-6273

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Date deposited: 04 Jun 2015 13:13
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 03:47

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Contributors

Author: M. Russo
Author: L. Guo
Author: Yehuda Baruch ORCID iD

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