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Job security as a threatened resource: reactions to job insecurity in culturally distinct regions
Authors:Anna Sender  Alexandra Arnold  Bruno Staffelbach
Institution:1. Department of Business Administration, University of Zurich, Zurich, Switzerland;2. Rutgers School of Management and Labor Relations, The State University of New Jersey, Rutgers, NJ, USA
Abstract:As downsizing and restructuring have become global phenomena, the impact of job insecurity on employee attitudes has received significant attention. However, research examining the role of cultural dimensions has been largely unexplored. Drawing on the conservation of resources theory, we investigated whether the relationships between both quantitative job insecurity (i.e. the perceived threat of job loss) and qualitative job insecurity (i.e. the perceived threat of losing valued job features) and employee attitudes (job satisfaction and turnover intention) differ in culturally distinct regions. This was examined using representative employee samples from two regions of Switzerland which differ in societal practices uncertainty avoidance and performance orientation: the German-speaking (n = 966) and the French-speaking (n = 307) regions. Our research indicates that whereas the relationship between quantitative job insecurity and turnover intention is stronger in the French-speaking region where there is higher societal practice uncertainty avoidance, the relationship between qualitative job insecurity and job satisfaction is stronger in the German-speaking region where there is higher societal practice performance orientation.
Keywords:Job insecurity  job satisfaction  performance orientation  turnover intention  uncertainty avoidance  work-stress
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