Abstract

Innovation is considered to be of crucial importance for organisational survival and growth, and in this respect employees play a leading role, as they are the ones who develop innovative ideas. At the same time, the struggle for organisational survival and growth gives rise to perceptions of job insecurity. To date, few studies have explored how employees’ innovative work behaviour (IWB) is influenced by the perceived threat of job loss (i.e. job insecurity). As both job insecurity and IWB are increasingly salient in light of organisational change and competition, the present study examines the relationship between job insecurity and IWB, as well as the role of psychological contract breach in explaining this relationship. We hypothesized a negative relation between job insecurity and innovative work behaviour, with psychological contract breach as a mediator in this relationship. Participants were 190 employees from an industrial organisation that had faced restructuring and downsizing for several years. Contrary to our predictions, no direct association was found between job insecurity and the two sub-dimensions of innovative work behaviour (i.e., idea generation and idea implementation). Indirect relationships, however, were found between job insecurity and the two types of IWB through psychological contract breach. Surprisingly, psychological contract breach was positively related to idea generation and idea implementation. These findings shed new light on the relationship between job insecurity and IWB.

Highlights

  • Technological changes, the aftermath of the economic recession, globalization and worldwide competitiveness have caused organisations to resort to different kinds of restructurings, often in the form of employee downsizing (Burke & Ng, 2006)

  • As the violation of promises made during recruitment has been found to explain several of job insecurity’s attitudinal outcomes (De Cuyper & De Witte, 2006), and psychological contract fulfilment has been shown to be an antecedent of innovative behaviour (Ramamoorthy, Flood, Slattery, & Sardessai, 2005), the present study aims to examine whether breach of the psychological contract plays an explanatory role in the association between job insecurity and both dimensions of innovative work behaviour (IWB)

  • Psychological contract breach was positively correlated to idea generation as well as idea implementation

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Technological changes, the aftermath of the economic recession, globalization and worldwide competitiveness have caused organisations to resort to different kinds of restructurings, often in the form of employee downsizing (Burke & Ng, 2006). Organisations employ these measures to increase productivity and improve their cost structures, research has shown that an organisation’s performance rather deteriorates than improves following downsizing (Datta, Guthrie, Basuil, & Pandey, 2010). Their results indicated that experienced job insecurity was a key mechanism in interpreting the adverse outcomes of organizational restructuring

Objectives
Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call