Does CEO guilt influence the adoption of employee welfare practices?
Does CEO guilt influence the adoption of employee welfare practices?
This study examines the role of CEOs' guilt in adopting employee welfare practices (EWP). Using the context of privatization that is associated with large-scale layoffs, we argue that witnessing the distress of laid-off workers and their families causes CEOs to experience guilt for not doing enough to alleviate their suffering. The guilt, in turn, drives CEOs to engage in remedial actions of restitution that reflect positively on employee-related practices. We find support for our idea in a sample of newly privatized firms from 31 countries. Our results show that CEOs' guilt positively influences the adoption of EWP among newly privatized firms. This effect is stronger in countries with collectivistic orientation and higher unemployment rates. Our findings suggest CEOs' values and emotions play an important role in business decisions concerning their employees. This perspective challenges the conventional view of business decisions as purely rational and profit-driven, highlighting the importance of ethical and emotional considerations in decision-making.
CEOs’ guilt, employee welfare practices, layoffs, privatized firms, CEOs' guilt
Ashfaq, Saira
969f1427-e3b4-4c52-b647-3c1b0305b7fe
Riaz, Hammad
94d6a827-d115-44fa-be2b-c92ec110c2dd
Mujtaba, Ghulam
3d08381a-b3ee-4e05-b497-76a09f9701aa
Saeed, Abubakr
9b178710-8c61-4298-809a-0d3f0b674ab9
Baloch, Saad
0baa859e-4d0d-4dda-8433-d813655c88b5
20 August 2024
Ashfaq, Saira
969f1427-e3b4-4c52-b647-3c1b0305b7fe
Riaz, Hammad
94d6a827-d115-44fa-be2b-c92ec110c2dd
Mujtaba, Ghulam
3d08381a-b3ee-4e05-b497-76a09f9701aa
Saeed, Abubakr
9b178710-8c61-4298-809a-0d3f0b674ab9
Baloch, Saad
0baa859e-4d0d-4dda-8433-d813655c88b5
Ashfaq, Saira, Riaz, Hammad, Mujtaba, Ghulam, Saeed, Abubakr and Baloch, Saad
(2024)
Does CEO guilt influence the adoption of employee welfare practices?
European Management Review.
(doi:10.1111/emre.12675).
Abstract
This study examines the role of CEOs' guilt in adopting employee welfare practices (EWP). Using the context of privatization that is associated with large-scale layoffs, we argue that witnessing the distress of laid-off workers and their families causes CEOs to experience guilt for not doing enough to alleviate their suffering. The guilt, in turn, drives CEOs to engage in remedial actions of restitution that reflect positively on employee-related practices. We find support for our idea in a sample of newly privatized firms from 31 countries. Our results show that CEOs' guilt positively influences the adoption of EWP among newly privatized firms. This effect is stronger in countries with collectivistic orientation and higher unemployment rates. Our findings suggest CEOs' values and emotions play an important role in business decisions concerning their employees. This perspective challenges the conventional view of business decisions as purely rational and profit-driven, highlighting the importance of ethical and emotional considerations in decision-making.
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Accepted/In Press date: 31 July 2024
Published date: 20 August 2024
Keywords:
CEOs’ guilt, employee welfare practices, layoffs, privatized firms, CEOs' guilt
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 493728
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/493728
ISSN: 1740-4754
PURE UUID: 43a0e4f8-cd2b-4adc-ab08-650f2a90ffa9
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Date deposited: 11 Sep 2024 17:21
Last modified: 12 Sep 2024 02:07
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Contributors
Author:
Saira Ashfaq
Author:
Hammad Riaz
Author:
Ghulam Mujtaba
Author:
Abubakr Saeed
Author:
Saad Baloch
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