Abstract

The retention of key human resources is a challenge and a necessity for any organisation. This paper analyses the impact of the existence and accessibility of work-family policies on the well-being of workers and their intention to leave the organisation. To test the proposed hypotheses, we applied a structural equation model based on the partial least squares path modelling (PLS-SEM) approach to a sample of 558 service sector workers. The results show that the existence and accessibility of work-family policies directly reduce the intention to leave the organisation. Moreover, this relationship also occurs indirectly, by mediating the well-being that is generated by these work-family policies. We also analysed the moderating role that gender and hierarchy could have in the above relationships. In addition to the above theoretical implications, this study has practical implications. The findings show that employees with family and work balance problems experience lower emotional well-being, more health problems and eventually higher turnover rates. To avoid these problems, management must focus not only on the implementation of work-family policies but also on their accessibility, without subsequent retaliation or prejudice to employees. Additionally, management should pay special attention to female managers, given their greater difficulty in balancing work and family life.

Highlights

  • Experienced and well-trained professionals who leave their organisations are a major problem for management [1]

  • The aim of the present study is to analyse the impact that the existence and accessibility of work-family policies (WFPs) have on turnover intention while considering the mediating effect that well-being has on this relationship

  • The results of this study provide, as an added value to the literature on WFPs, a separate analysis of the effect that the existence and accessibility of these policies have on the well-being and turnover intention

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Summary

Introduction

Experienced and well-trained professionals who leave their organisations are a major problem for management [1]. It is necessary to retrain new employees to replace those who have left [5] For this reason, some human resource management practices aim at retaining workers by reducing their turnover intention [6]. Work interference in the family reduces the level of employees’ satisfaction [42] and this conflicting situation encourages employees to leave their organisations [39,40]. This phenomenon is even more pronounced in the case of long weekly working hours [43]. Studies consider WFC to be a significant predictor of turnover intention [20]

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