Abstract

This paper examines the relationship between subjectivity in performance evaluation and the three dimensions of justice perceptions in an emerging economy; prior research on this topic has primarily focused solely on the advanced capitalist economies of Western nations. The paper also aims to expand on existing research by focusing on the role of interactional justice perceptions in relation to subjective evaluation (Byrne et al. in Hum Resour Manag J 22(2):129–147; Folger and Cropanzano, in Organizational justice and human resource management, Sage, Thousand Oaks, 1998). Results from a survey of 160 middle managers in Vietnam indicate that subjective evaluation is associated predominantly with negative effects. We found that, in an emerging economy like that of Vietnam, subjective evaluation reduces interactional justice perception, which in turn decreases the perception of procedural and distributive justice. The mediating effects suggest that the reason subjective evaluation influences employee procedural/distributive justice perceptions lies in the interactional justice perceived from supervisors. This research clarifies the effects of subjective evaluation on the dimensions of justice perception and contributes to the literature on performance evaluation and organizational justice in a non-Western context. It also highlights the importance of respect and communication for fairness perception in both theory and practice.

Highlights

  • Fairness or justice perception is a pillar of a healthy organizational culture and essential for employee well-being (Ashkanasy, 2011)

  • Our study proposes that interactional justice perception mediates the relationships between subjective evaluation and procedural justice perception

  • It proposes that interactional justice perception is the mediator in the relationship between subjective evaluation and distributive justice perception

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Summary

Introduction

Fairness or justice perception is a pillar of a healthy organizational culture and essential for employee well-being (Ashkanasy, 2011). As such, it is one of the prevailing moral standards (Whiteside & Barclay, 2016) and core elements of ethical leadership (Brown et al, 2005; Xu et al, 2016). This study aims to fill this research gap by examining performance evaluation systems and justice perceptions in a non-Western emerging context. We examine the relationship between subjectivity in performance evaluation and justice perceptions in the Vietnamese context, as an example of emerging economies. We aim to extend previous work by developing a model in which interactional justice is a mediator between subjective evaluation and the other two justice dimensions

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