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The relationship between abusive supervision and employee's reaction: the job demands-resources model perspective

Liang-Chih Huang (Department of Labor Relations, National Chung Cheng University, Minhsiung, Taiwan)
Cheng-Chen Lin (Department of Business Administration, National Pingtung University of Science and Technology, Pingtung, Taiwan)
Szu-Chi Lu (Department of Business Administration, National Taichung University of Science and Technology, Taichung, Taiwan)

Personnel Review

ISSN: 0048-3486

Article publication date: 1 April 2020

Issue publication date: 16 October 2020

1539

Abstract

Purpose

Based on the job demands-resources model, the present study proposes viewing abusive supervision as one type of job demand causing employees' emotional exhaustion, which results in psychological withdrawal behavior. In addition, job crafting can be viewed as a means to acquire job resources, and it buffers the influence of abusive supervision on employees' emotional exhaustion. Moreover, the present study also proposes the moderating effect of job crafting on abusive supervision and psychological withdrawal behavior will be mediated by emotional exhaustion.

Design/methodology/approach

Considering the issue of common method variance, data were not only collected in a multi-temporal research design but also tested by Harman's one-factor test. In addition, a series of confirmatory factor analyses was conducted to ensure the discriminant validity of measures. The moderated mediation hypotheses were tested on a sample of 267 participants.

Findings

The process model analysis showed that emotional exhaustion partially mediates the relationship between abusive supervision and psychological withdrawal behavior. Moreover, job crafting buffers the detrimental effect of abusive supervision on emotional exhaustion, and the less exhausted employees exhibit less psychological withdrawal behavior than those exhausted.

Originality/value

This study proposed a moderated mediation model to examine how and when abusive supervision leads to more employees' psychological withdrawal behaviors, and found that emotional exhaustion is one potential mechanism and job crafting is one potential moderator. Specifically, it was revealed that employees view abusive supervision as a kind of social and organizational aspect of job demands which will exacerbate emotional exhaustion, and, in turn, lead to more psychological withdrawal behavior. However, when employees view themselves as job crafter, they can adopt various job crafting behaviors to decrease the emotional exhaustion, and thus less psychological withdrawal behavior.

Keywords

Acknowledgements

This research is supported by grants from the Ministry of Science and Technology, Taiwan (MOST-106-2410-H-194-089-SSS).

Citation

Huang, L.-C., Lin, C.-C. and Lu, S.-C. (2020), "The relationship between abusive supervision and employee's reaction: the job demands-resources model perspective", Personnel Review, Vol. 49 No. 9, pp. 2035-2054. https://doi.org/10.1108/PR-01-2019-0002

Publisher

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Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2020, Emerald Publishing Limited

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