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More than lip service: linking the intensity of empowerment initiatives to individual well-being and performance
Authors:Michal Biron  Peter A. Bamberger
Affiliation:1. Graduate School of Management, University of Haifa , Haifa, Israel;2. Department of Human Resource Studies , Tilburg University , Tilburg, the Netherlands mbiron@gsb.haifa.ac.il;4. Faculty of Management , Tel Aviv University , Ramat Aviv, Israel
Abstract:We conceptualize empowerment initiatives as varying in terms of intensity – or the degree to which the intervention is rhetorical (aiming to influence employees' sense of control at work, what we refer to as surface empowerment) as opposed to actual (aiming to influence the actual degree of employee job authority, what we refer to as deep empowerment). We then test the effects of rhetorical vs. actual empowerment interventions on employee well-being and performance, as well as the degree to which self-efficacy mediates these effects on the basis of a simulation-based experiment. Results indicate that although both surface and deep empowerment initiatives have beneficial effects on individual well-being, only the latter results in performance increase. We also find that self-efficacy fully mediates the association between surface empowerment (as compared with non-empowerment) and well-being, but only partially mediates the association between deep empowerment (as compared with non-empowerment) and well-being.
Keywords:employee well-being  empowerment  performance  self-efficacy
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