Abstract

PurposeIs it possible to consider organizational entrenchment (OE) and continued commitment (CC) as the same phenomenon? Are there enough differences between CC and affective commitment (AC) to defend that they cannot be part of the same construct? The objective of this study was to examine the convergence of validated measures between OE and CC and their discrimination to AC. The authors’ aim was to compare two models of antecedents and their consequences: the model that includes OE and AC, and the one that includes CC and AC.Design/methodology/approachAn extensive cross-sectional study was conducted with a sample of 1,648 respondents (the majority lived in the Northeast region of Brazil, worked in private services companies, were female, single, under 35 years old, had, at least, begun college studies and received up to five times the minimum wage). A six-point Likert scale was used in this study. To measure OE, CC and AC, the authors used reduced versions of validated measures. To test the hypotheses, first, the authors used Pearson's correlation analysis and then, structural equation modeling, comparing two models of antecedents and consequences (one including OE and AC, and the other, including CC and AC).FindingsAs expected, affective commitment had a positive impact on the desired behavior (intention for commitment, defense, staying), whereas entrenchment and continuance commitment had a negative or non-significant impact on these behaviors. Results show the existence of a conceptual and empirical overlap between organizational entrenchment and continuance commitment and indicate that the continuance dimension is not part of commitment but rather part of organizational entrenchment.Research limitations/implicationsThe fact that this is a cross-sectional study sets a limitation on the results, for not allowing greater understanding of the dynamics and the causal direction of relationships. Additionally, it follows the trend of studies in the organizational behavior field of utilizing self-reported data, which results in problems related to perceptual bias (Morrow, 2011).Practical implicationsThe practical implications of this study regard a greater clarification on which behaviors are expected from either committed and entrenched workers, and which drivers may lead to each of these bonds. Therefore, a better understanding of the phenomenon contributes to the training of managers and to the design of organizational policies and practices.Social implicationsThe clarity of bonds also allows its application to different contexts beyond business organizations, as a step to reach better understanding of commitment and entrenchment in different settings, economical and national realities.Originality/valueIt is expected that these findings add a higher precision to the research on commitment, thus contributing to the validity of the measures. Given these results and confirmation that OE and CC represent the same bond, it is considered appropriate to designate this type of bond simply as OE. Additionally, the results of this study represent a further argument in favor of prioritizing the AC than CC in research and in management of organizational commitment.

Highlights

  • When joining an organization, the worker enters a complex environment, consisting of technical and social structures

  • We argue that the second type of bond, called continuance commitment (CC), becomes part of a construct that explains the permanence of the worker through necessity: organizational entrenchment (OE)

  • An attitude toward a behavior is more restricted, since the resulting behavior is already specified. They justified the results found in studies on CC, since there are few variables with which it has significant relationships when compared to the associations found for affective commitment (AC)

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Summary

Introduction

The worker enters a complex environment, consisting of technical and social structures. The worker may notice that there are advantages in continuing the relationship with the organization and that there would be disadvantages to break it Permanence, when it occurs, may reflect necessity and can be the result of the investments accumulated in one’s experience with the organization, in addition to the evaluation of costs and benefits of staying (Rodrigues & Bastos, 2011b). Other scholars have suggested the demarcation between these two types, for the purpose of assigning them to different conceptual bodies (Klein & Park, 2016, Cooper-Hakim & Viswesvaran, 2005, Solinger, Olffen & Roe, 2008) To support this separation, we argue that the first bond, long known as affective commitment (AC), is the essence of OC, which should be, in turn, considered a one-dimensional construct. This bond refers to the set of investments and arrangements made by the individual in the organization that, if not available in other employment alternatives, could force the individual to stay with the organization

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