Deviant behavior in a moderated-mediation framework of incentives, organizational justice perception, and reward expectancy
Deviant behavior in a moderated-mediation framework of incentives, organizational justice perception, and reward expectancy
This study introduces the concept of deviant behavior in a moderated-mediation framework of incentives and organizational justice perception. The proposed relationships in the theoretical framework were tested with a sample of 311 academics, using simple random sampling, via causal models and structural equation modeling. The findings suggest that incentives might boost the apparent performance, but not necessarily the intended performance. The results confirm that employees’ affection for incentives has direct, indirect, and conditional indirect effects on their deviant behavior likelihood. The relationship between employee deviant behavior likelihood and affection for incentives was moderated by organizational justice perception and partially mediated by reward expectancy, thus having significant contributions toward the extant literature of deviant behavior and incentives. The findings have important implications for managers, academicians, and policy makers for mitigating adverse behavior in professional employees through proper use of incentives.
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Shoaib, Shandana
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Baruch, Yehuda
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Shoaib, Shandana
d904bb6d-b26f-429e-a3c3-1fd736be4d25
Baruch, Yehuda
25b89777-def4-4958-afdc-0ceab43efe8a
Shoaib, Shandana and Baruch, Yehuda
(2017)
Deviant behavior in a moderated-mediation framework of incentives, organizational justice perception, and reward expectancy.
Journal of Business Ethics, .
(doi:10.1007/s10551-017-3651-y).
Abstract
This study introduces the concept of deviant behavior in a moderated-mediation framework of incentives and organizational justice perception. The proposed relationships in the theoretical framework were tested with a sample of 311 academics, using simple random sampling, via causal models and structural equation modeling. The findings suggest that incentives might boost the apparent performance, but not necessarily the intended performance. The results confirm that employees’ affection for incentives has direct, indirect, and conditional indirect effects on their deviant behavior likelihood. The relationship between employee deviant behavior likelihood and affection for incentives was moderated by organizational justice perception and partially mediated by reward expectancy, thus having significant contributions toward the extant literature of deviant behavior and incentives. The findings have important implications for managers, academicians, and policy makers for mitigating adverse behavior in professional employees through proper use of incentives.
Text
Shoaib Baruch Deviant Behavior as accepted JBE 2017
- Accepted Manuscript
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Accepted/In Press date: 19 July 2017
e-pub ahead of print date: 3 August 2017
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 412781
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/412781
ISSN: 0167-4544
PURE UUID: 24f2ed2a-9fe8-4486-a62b-5257de7e7205
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Date deposited: 01 Aug 2017 16:31
Last modified: 16 Mar 2024 05:34
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Author:
Shandana Shoaib
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