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Workplace antecedents of quiet quitting behavior: insights from graduate workers in India

Workplace antecedents of quiet quitting behavior: insights from graduate workers in India
Workplace antecedents of quiet quitting behavior: insights from graduate workers in India
Drawing on a theoretical framework of Job Demands-Resources (JD-R), our study aims to consider how workplace antecedents of perceived quiet firing (also known as involuntary attrition), perceived co-worker support, and experience (tenure at an organization) may influence quiet quitting behavior. Data were collected via questionnaire responses from 209 workers in India who had graduated from university within the last 7 years. The findings show that (1) perceived quiet firing is positively associated with quiet quitting; (2) perceived co-worker support is negatively associated with quiet quitting; (3) experience moderates the positive association between perceived quiet firing and quiet quitting in such a way that the relationship is weaker as one’s tenure at an organization increases; and (4) experience does not moderate the negative association between perceived co-worker support and quiet quitting. The study’s contributions come from understanding how the interplay of demands (i.e., perceived quiet firing) and resources (i.e., perceived co-worker support and experience) determine quiet quitting behaviors in the workplace. Additionally, the temporal dimension of experience facilitates the acquisition of organizational-specific knowledge and resources. In contrast, perceptions of co-worker support appear specific to a given point in time. Policy implications come from providing guidance to organizations on how to reduce quiet quitting behaviors by ensuring that the resources available to employees exceed the demands placed on them.
2661-4308
Nimmi, Mohandas P.
af0dc088-2f06-4d66-89c9-7fd5fc4ebca5
Jayakumar, Dharan
44c13451-6382-4d6a-8986-629224c269bd
Muthuraman, Niranjana
4ec3995c-150e-44cd-b808-7cfee43c310c
Nair, Gangothri P.
ffbad337-fd71-4302-950d-39dc21262227
Donald, William E.
0b3cb4ca-8ed9-4a5f-9c10-359923469eec
Nimmi, Mohandas P.
af0dc088-2f06-4d66-89c9-7fd5fc4ebca5
Jayakumar, Dharan
44c13451-6382-4d6a-8986-629224c269bd
Muthuraman, Niranjana
4ec3995c-150e-44cd-b808-7cfee43c310c
Nair, Gangothri P.
ffbad337-fd71-4302-950d-39dc21262227
Donald, William E.
0b3cb4ca-8ed9-4a5f-9c10-359923469eec

Nimmi, Mohandas P., Jayakumar, Dharan, Muthuraman, Niranjana, Nair, Gangothri P. and Donald, William E. (2024) Workplace antecedents of quiet quitting behavior: insights from graduate workers in India. Human Resources Management and Services, 6 (4), [3450]. (doi:10.18282/hrms.v6i4.3450).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Drawing on a theoretical framework of Job Demands-Resources (JD-R), our study aims to consider how workplace antecedents of perceived quiet firing (also known as involuntary attrition), perceived co-worker support, and experience (tenure at an organization) may influence quiet quitting behavior. Data were collected via questionnaire responses from 209 workers in India who had graduated from university within the last 7 years. The findings show that (1) perceived quiet firing is positively associated with quiet quitting; (2) perceived co-worker support is negatively associated with quiet quitting; (3) experience moderates the positive association between perceived quiet firing and quiet quitting in such a way that the relationship is weaker as one’s tenure at an organization increases; and (4) experience does not moderate the negative association between perceived co-worker support and quiet quitting. The study’s contributions come from understanding how the interplay of demands (i.e., perceived quiet firing) and resources (i.e., perceived co-worker support and experience) determine quiet quitting behaviors in the workplace. Additionally, the temporal dimension of experience facilitates the acquisition of organizational-specific knowledge and resources. In contrast, perceptions of co-worker support appear specific to a given point in time. Policy implications come from providing guidance to organizations on how to reduce quiet quitting behaviors by ensuring that the resources available to employees exceed the demands placed on them.

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More information

Accepted/In Press date: 20 February 2024
e-pub ahead of print date: 12 March 2024
Published date: 12 March 2024

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 488080
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/488080
ISSN: 2661-4308
PURE UUID: cf4bc661-f336-4533-b128-ee8df6350b53
ORCID for William E. Donald: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-3670-5374

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Date deposited: 14 Mar 2024 18:56
Last modified: 02 May 2024 02:06

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Contributors

Author: Mohandas P. Nimmi
Author: Dharan Jayakumar
Author: Niranjana Muthuraman
Author: Gangothri P. Nair
Author: William E. Donald ORCID iD

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