Publication | Open Access
Can Public Leadership Increase Public Service Motivation and Job Performance?
155
Citations
66
References
2020
Year
OrganizationsJob PerformanceEducationAdministrative LeadershipPublic Personnel AdministrationHuman Resource ManagementPublic RelationsOrganizational BehaviorManagementNetwork Governance LeadershipPublic PolicyMotivationEducational LeadershipBusiness LeadershipPublic Service MotivationLeadershipPsm LevelsService LeadershipPublic SectorBusinessEthical LeadershipLeadership DevelopmentPolitical Science
Abstract To advance understanding of leadership in the public sector, this article examines the link between accountability, rule‐following, political loyalty, and network governance approaches to leadership and employees' public service motivation (PSM) and individual job performance. Using a sample of 300 civil servants and their 64 managers in China, the study finds that accountability, rule‐following, political loyalty, and network governance leadership are all significantly positively related to employees' PSM levels and job performance. The results of multilevel modeling show that network governance leadership has the strongest positive relationship with both PSM and job performance, suggesting that managers should encourage public employees to initiate and maintain contacts outside their organizations to access relevant information, technical expertise, and resources that may be not be available internally.
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