organizational commitment of managerial employees… · 2013. 7. 3. · managerial employees as...

12
i ORGANIZATIONAL COMMITMENT OF MANAGERIAL EMPLOYEES: A UNIFIED THEORY AND ANTECEDENTS A dissertation submitted by Abdul M Baksh, PhD, MSc In partial fulfillment of the award of Doctor of business Administration Faculty of Business, University of Southern Queensland

Upload: others

Post on 31-Jan-2021

1 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

TRANSCRIPT

  • i

    ORGANIZATIONAL COMMITMENT OF MANAGERIAL EMPLOYEES: A UNIFIED THEORY AND ANTECEDENTS

    A dissertation submitted by Abdul M Baksh, PhD, MSc In partial fulfillment of the award of Doctor of business Administration Faculty of Business, University of Southern Queensland

  • i

    ABSTRACT

    Much has been written about organizational commitment in the past twenty five

    years and these studies have significantly contributed to the extant understanding of

    the concept. However, these efforts have also contributed to the confusion,

    inconsistencies, and disagreements about the meaning of the concept that seem to

    characterize the organizational commitment literature. This milieu required, as a

    matter of necessity, that the disparate conceptualizations of organizational

    commitment be reconciled and synthesized to form a unified, comprehensive

    theory. This situation and the apparent need to focus on those organizational factors

    that function as antecedents of managerial commitment to organizations provided

    the impetus for the present study.

    In keeping with the above purpose, this study has developed a comprehensive

    unified theory of organizational commitment that was tested using structural

    equation modeling. The study shows that the theory of organizational commitment

    is based on six separate parent theories, including attitudes, psychological

    ownership, psychological contract, values, certain aspects of the three-component

    model of Meyer and Allen (1991), and social exchange, which makes it a multi-

    disciplinary theory. The theories of attitudes and psychological ownership

    constitute the psychological ingredient of the affection employees manifest to their

    organization and provide the theoretical foundation of the affective dimension of

    organizational commitment. Similarly, the theories of psychological contract,

    values and organizational culture provide the corner stone for the feelings of moral

    obligation employees display toward the organization, and concomitantly, the moral

    dimension of organizational commitment. Finally, social exchange theory and labor

    market forces define a socio-economic relationship between each individual and the

    organization and provide the basis for the continuance dimension of organizational

    commitment.

    The research problem identified for this study was the lack of a unified theory of

    organizational commitment that is needed to identify the antecedents of managerial

    commitment to organizations. Thus, the purpose of the study was to examine the

    state of the theory of organizational commitment and propose a unified socio-

    psychological theory that provided the theoretical foundation to identify the

    antecedents and dimensions of the organizational commitment of managerial

    employees. Therefore, the research question that the study answered is: what are the

    antecedents and dimensions of managerial commitment in organizations? In

    addition to this, the study investigated six related issues: (a) the socio-psychological

    theories providing the theoretical foundations of a unified theory of organizational

    commitment, (b) the principal dimensions of a new unified theory of organizational

    commitment, (c) the predictors and causes of managerial commitment, (d) the

    degree to which perceived pay equity, socialization tactics, opportunities for

    development, organizational trust, and job satisfaction act as predictors of

    organizational commitment, (e) the variable or variables which moderate and/or

    mediate the impact of the predictors of organizational commitment and, (f) the

    relationships among the five predictors named above.

    The study was justified on the basis of its potential to make significant contributions

    to both management practice and theory. From the perspective of management

    practice, the study has provided evidence that should enhance the ability of

    organizations to: (a) promote feelings of assonance and minimize feelings of The

    study was justified on the basis of its potential to make significant contributions to

  • ii

    both management practice and theory. From the perspective of management

    practice, the study has provided evidence that should enhance the ability of

    organizations to: (a) promote feelings of assonance and minimize feelings of

    dissonance among their managerial employees through equitable pay, (b) increase

    the level of managerial job satisfaction and concomitantly elevate the trust levels of

    managers, (c) integrate the interests of managers with those of the organization

    through effective socialization tactics and provide managerial employees with

    opportunities for development in order to enhance their moral obligations to the

    organization. Moreover, the study provides evidence and tools which organizations

    may use to engender in their managerial employees strong feelings of ownership for

    their organizations, enhance managers‟ trust levels, and minimize their inclinations

    to leave their organizations. Theoretically, the study has analyzed and evaluated the extant theories of

    organizational commitment, reconciled differences among the various models,

    synthesized the multitude of disparate theories, models, concepts and definitions

    found in the literature of organizational commitment as a means of conceptualizing

    a new theoretical socio-psychological model of organizational commitment. In

    essence this effort should make a solid contribution to knowledge in the field and

    provide the foundation for future research in managerial commitment.

    Methodologically, the data used in this study were collected from four different

    organizations at two different time periods of three months apart. Both descriptive

    statistical analysis using SPSS 12 and structural equation modeling using AMOS 16

    were used to analyze the data. The SEM analysis determined the predictive strength

    of the selected independent variables/antecedents, and Barron and Kenny‟s

    moderator and mediator analysis identified the moderator and mediator effects of

    the independent variables on the dependent variable. The outcome from these

    analyses is a model which fits the two sets of data. Apart from other fit indices, the

    computations indicated insignificant Chi-sq. values of 16.113, p=.065 and 8.037,

    p=.442 for the two sets of data respectively. This particular finding confirms that

    the model is theoretically sound and is perhaps a unique development in the field of

    organizational commitment.

    The results of the study confirm that organizational commitment is a multi-

    dimensional theory with three major domains-affective, continuance, and moral

    commitment, each of which has a distinct conceptual foundation. The study also

    confirms that: (a) affective commitment is based predominantly on psychological

    factors; (b) moral commitment is founded on philosophical, ethical and sociological

    factors; and (c) continuance commitment which is socio-economic by nature

    focuses predominantly on risk, economic losses, economic gains and labor market

    conditions that indicate the availability/non-availability of suitable alternative

    employment. Additionally, the study indicates that pay equity, developmental

    opportunities and socialization tactics act as both moderators and mediators of job

    satisfaction and organizational trust which in turn are the two independent variables

    predicting the three dimensions of organizational commitment.

    In the final analysis, the findings of this study should: (a) be significantly beneficial

    to future research in the field of organizational commitment, (b) provide

    organizations with critical information for human resource policy formulation and,

    (c) contribute meaningfully to knowledge in the field. No other known study in

    organizational commitment has gone through such indepth analysis, particularly the

    elaborate process of theory building.

  • iii

    CERTIFICATION OF DESERTATION

    I certify that this dissertation is entirely my own effort, except where

    otherwise acknowledged. I also certify that the ideas, research, results,

    analyses, software and conclusions reported are original and have not been

    previously submitted for any award, except where otherwise acknowledged.

    __________________ _____________________

    Signature of Candidate Date

    ENDORSEMENT

    _______________ ____________________

    Signature of Principal Supervisor Date

    ___________________________ _______________________

    Signature of Associate Supervisor Date

  • iv

    ACKNOWLEDGEMENT

    I am very pleased to express my sincere gratitude to several people who have

    contributed to the completion of this research project. First, I am profoundly

    grateful to my Supervisor, Dr. Ray Gordon who has provided very incisive

    criticisms, highly relevant and useful recommendations, and above all, patience

    with my tendency to delve into excessive details. Indeed, the quality of this

    document owes much to Dr. Gordon‟s very insightful and valuable contribution.

    I also wish to express my gratitude to Professor Erwee who, particularly in the

    early stage in the development of this document provided me with very useful

    insights and guidance.

    I must also thank the four organizations that greatly assisted me in gathering the

    data used in this study. Without their willingness to let me have access to their

    managerial employees as participants of this project, this document may still be

    in its developmental stages.

    Finally, I want to express my gratitude to the Examiners who undoubtedly spent

    hours pouring over this document from which they ably provided me with

    valuable recommendations for its improvement.

  • v

    Table of Contents

    Abstract

    Certification of the Dissertation

    Acknowledgements

    Table of Contents

    List if Figures

    List of Tables

    List of Appendices

    CHAPTER ONE--INTRODUCTION 1

    Background to the study 1

    Research problem, purpose and issues 7

    Justification for the study 8

    1 Contribution to Management Practice 9

    2 Contribution to Theory 11

    Research design and methodology 14

    Outline of this dissertation 16

    Definitions 17

    Delimitations and scope 18

    Conclusion 18

    CHAPTER TWO--LITERATURE REVIEW 19 Theoretical foundations 19

    Parent theories of organizational commitment 23

    1. Attitude-Behavior Theory 24

    2. Psychological Ownership Theory 28

    3. Psychological Contract Theory 32

    4. Theory of values and commitment conflict 37

    5. The Three-Component Model 43

    6. Social Exchange Theory 52

    Dimensions of organizational commitment 58

    Several versus one comprehensive theory of organizational commitment 58

    Theoretical framework 60

    Antecedents of organizational commitment 63

    1. Perceived Pay Equity 63

    2 Socialization Tactics 67

    3 Organizational Trust 76

    4 Opportunities for Development 79

    5 Jobsatisfaction 83

    Chapter Summary 90

    CHAPTER THREE--RESEARCH METHODOLOGY 92 Overview Of The Study Design 92

    Methodology 92

    1. Population 92

    2. Data collection and analysis 93

    3. Sampling design and strategy 93

    4. Level and unit of analyses 94

    5. Scales 94

    5.1 Organizational commitment of managerial employees 95

    5.2 Perceived pay equity 96

    5.3 Opportunities for development 97

    5.4 Socialization tactics 98

  • i

    5.5 Organizational trust 99

    5.6 Jobsatisfaction 100

    Data Screening 102

    1. Reliability 102

    2. Validity 105

    3. Other Issues 106

    Procedures 109

    1. Ethical Clearance 109

    2. Piloting the Questionnaire 109

    3. Sampling Strategies and Procedure 109

    4. Security and Safety of Completed Questionnaires 110

    Data Analysis 110

    1. Structural Equation Modeling 110

    1.1.The Measurement Model 111

    1.2.The Structural Model 112

    2. The moderator/mediator research model 112

    3. Model fit criteria and model fit indexes 116

    4. Testing model fit 120

    5. Alternative Models 121

    6. The Four-step Process 121

    7. Parameter Estimates 122

    8. Model Specification 123

    9. Model Identification 124

    10.Model Assessment 128

    Scope and Limitations 128

    CHAPTER FOUR: RESULTS 130 Demographics 130

    1. Population 130

    2. Response rate 130

    3. Age distribution of respondents 130

    4. Educational attainments of respondents 131

    5. Gender distribution of respondents 131

    Data Screening 131

    1. Reliability 132

    2. Validity 132

    3. Non-normality Issues 134

    4. Resolving missing data 134

    5. Resolving Outlier Problems 134

    6. Resolving multicollinearity issues 134

    Findings: Sample 1 136

    1.The structural equation model 136

    2.Goodness-of-fit indices 137

    3.Alternative models: Sample 1 data 138

    4.Parameters estimates 139

    Findings: Sample 2 140

    1.Structural equation model 141

    2.Goodness-of-fit indices 141

    3.Alternative models: Sample 2 data 142

    4.Parameter estimates 142

    Model Specification 144

    1.Factor loadings 144

    2.The independent clusters basis 145

    Model Identification 145

    1.Identifiability of the measurement model 146

  • ii

    2.Identifiability of the path model 146

    3.Identifiability and scaling 146

    4.Other measures 147

    Summary of Results 147

    CHAPTER FIVE: DISCUSSION AND CONCLUSION 149

    Introduction 149

    Research problem 150

    Research purpose 152

    Research question 154

    Research issues and implications for theory 162

    1.Theoretical Foundations 162

    1.1.Commitment as a manifestation of attitudes 162

    1.2.Commitment as an expression of ownership 164

    1.3.Commitment as fulfillment of psychological contract 166

    1.4.Commitment as a manifestation of values 168

    1.5.Commitment as social exchange 169

    1.6.Commitment as Culture 171

    2.Dimensions of organizational commitment 172

    3.Predictors of organizational commitment 173

    3.1.Perceived pay equity 174

    3.2.Socialization tactics 175

    3.3.Organizational trust 177

    3.4.Opportunities for development 178

    3.5.Jobsatisfaction 179

    4.Correlates of the three commitment dimensions 181

    5.Moderators and mediators 183

    6.Relatiionships among the predictor variables 185

    Implications for policy 187

    1.Perceived pay equity 187

    2.Socialization tactics 188

    3.Organizational trust 189

    4. Opportunities for development 191

    5.Jobsatisfaction 192

    Implications for management practice 193

    Limitations 197

    Implications for future research 199

    REFERENCES 204

    APPENDICES 231

  • i

    List of Figures

    Figure 2.1 Relationships between cognitions, feelings and behavior 25

    Figure 2.2 Theoretical model for the theory of relational cohesion 55

    Figure 2.3 Unified theoretical framework of managerial commitment to organizations 60

    Figure 2.4 The dynamic nature of organizational commitment 62

    Figure 2.5 A model of organizational socialization 75

    Figure 3.1 The moderator model 112

    Figure 3.2 Application of the moderator model 113

    Figure 3.3 The mediator model 114

    Figure 3.4 Path diagram combining mediation and moderation 115

    Figure 3.5 Approach to performing SEM analysis 122

    Figure 3.6 Recursive CFA model relating independent and dependent variables 127

    Figure 4.1 Recursive SEM model showing relationships between independent and 136

    dependent variables

    Figure 4.2 Recursive SEM model showing relationships between independent and 146

    dependent variables

    Figure 5.1 Framework for the new unified theory of organizational commitment 186

  • List of Tables

    Table 1.1 Partial list of studies 2

    Table 2.1 Partial list of studies indicating inconsistencies 20

    Table 2.2 Typology of psychological contracts 34

    Table 2.3 Comparison of four decision types on levels of motive forces and avoidability 51

    Table 2.4 Categorization of socialization tactics 68

    Table 2.5 Results of regression analysis of socialization outcomes 69

    Table 2.6 The five-factor personality model and job satisfaction 86

    Table 3.1 Comparison of alpha coefficients of socialization tactics 99

    Table 3.2 Composite reliabilities by dimension and response mode 100

    Table 3.3 Relationships between expectations, experiences and met-expectations 101

    Table 3.4 Burnham and Anderson‟s scale for interpreting the BCC AND AIC 121

    Table 4.1 Age distribution of participants 130

    Table 4.2 Respondents‟ Educational level 131

    Table 4.3 Gender distribution 131

    Table 4.4 Reliability statistics of sample 1 participants 132

    Table 4.5 Reliability statistics of sample 2 participants 132

    Table 4.6 Results of factor analysis for sample 1 data 133

    Table 4.7 Results of factor analysis for sample 2 data 133

    Table 4.8 Means, standard deviations, and correlations of sample 1 factors 135

    Table 4.9 Means, standard deviations, and correlations of sample 2 factors 135

    Table 4.10 Goodness-of-fit statistics: sample 1 data 138

    Table 4.11 Alternative models generated by AMOS: sample 1 data 138

    Table 4.12 Estimated loadings: sample 1 data 139

    Table 4.13 Regression weights, standard errors, critical ratios and P labels: sample 1 139

    Table 4.14 Standard covariances and correlations: sample 1 data 139

    Table 4.15 Variances: sample 1 140

    Table 4.16 Goodness-of-fit statistics for sample 2 data 142

    Table 4.17 Alternative models generated by AMOS for sample 2 data 142

    Table 4.18 Estimated loadings: sample 2 143

  • 2

    Table 4.19 Regression weights, standard errors, critical ratios and P labels: sample 2 143

    Table 4.20 Standard covariances and correlations: sample 2 data 143

    Table 4.21 Variances: sample 2 144

    Table4.22 Ratio of chi-square to degrees of freedom 147

    Table 5.1 Moderator/mediator effects of job satisfaction shown in Figures 4.1 and 4.2 183

    Table 5.2 Moderator/mediator effects of organizational trust shown Figures 4.1 and 4.2 184

  • 3

    List of Appendices

    1. Appendix A: Questionnaire: Survey of Managerial Employees

    2. Appendix B: Results of factor analysis for sample 1 and sample 2 data