Publication | Open Access
The ups and downs of felt job insecurity and job performance: The moderating role of informational justice
24
Citations
60
References
2020
Year
Social PsychologyIndividual DifferencesJob PerformanceHuman Resource ManagementFelt Job InsecurityOrganizational BehaviorSocial SciencesPsychologyEmployee AttitudeManagementWork AttitudeOrganizational PsychologyJob InsecurityJob AnalysisJob SatisfactionApplied Social PsychologyPerformance StudiesBusinessJusticeInformational Justice
In two intra-individual studies, we examine how felt job insecurity relates to job performance. Based on conservation of resources theory, we argue that there is a negative intra-individual relation between felt job insecurity and job performance. Informational justice is expected to moderate this within-person relationship, so that the relationship between felt job insecurity and job performance is weaker when informational justice is higher than on average. Hypotheses were tested in two studies conducted over a time span of six weeks (Study 1, N = 90) and four weeks (Study 2, N = 99) in organisations undergoing some form of change. Employees reported lower levels of contextual performance (Study 1) and productivity (Study 2) in weeks that felt job insecurity was higher than usual, unless employees perceived that their organisation had adequately informed them about the change. In the latter case, contextual performance and productivity levels remained intact. Our findings extend existing research by showing that intra-individual variations in felt job insecurity and informational justice help explain intra-individual variations in job performance. Our interpretation, though tentative, is that informational justice may serve as a substitute for the resources lost due to felt job insecurity.
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