Abstract

We investigate the different mechanisms concerning how employees’ perceptions of external and internal corporate social responsibility (CSR) serve to influence employees’ work engagement. By combining social exchange theory and social identity theory, we implement and examine an integrated moderated mediation framework in which employees’ value orientations (e.g., collectivism or individualism) impact the mediating mechanism between their perceived external and internal CSR, organizational pride and perceived organizational support (POS), and work engagement. This work fills a research gap to examine the indirect relationship between employees’ perceptions of external and internal CSR and work engagement. Using two periods of survey data from 250 working employees in China, we find that employees’ perceptions of external CSR positively influence work engagement via organizational pride. The value of collectivism strengthens the direct effect of employees’ perceptions of external CSR on work engagement, and the indirect effect of employees’ perceptions of external CSR on work engagement via organizational pride. Moreover, employees’ perceptions of internal CSR positively influence work engagement via POS. The value of individualism strengthens the direct effect of employees’ perceptions of internal CSR on work engagement, and the indirect effect of employees’ perceptions of internal CSR on work engagement via POS. The results contribute to both theory and practice.

Highlights

  • The importance of work engagement to employee well-being and organizational productivity has been investigated in detail [1,2,3,4]

  • The most relevant studies have mainly tested the direct relationship between corporate social responsibility (CSR) and work engagement, without considering the possible mechanism under which the effect occurs

  • The results suggest that perceived organizational support (POS) partially mediates internal CSR and work engagement, which is demonstrated in Hypothesis 2

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Summary

Introduction

The importance of work engagement to employee well-being and organizational productivity has been investigated in detail [1,2,3,4]. Extant studies imply a positive link between employees’ perceptions of corporate social responsibility (CSR) and their work engagement [7,8,9,10,11]. The most relevant studies have mainly tested the direct relationship between CSR and work engagement, without considering the possible mechanism under which the effect occurs. Ignoring this possible mechanism may limit the practical implications of the study, and impair further investigation of this research. In order to address these issues, we attempt to reveal the multiple mediation mechanisms and possible boundary conditions through which CSR influences work engagement

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