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Employees' reactions to supervisors' fulfillment/non-fulfillment of psychological contract promises: an experimental field study

Khaldoun I. Ababneh (Department of Management, American University in Dubai,Dubai, United Arab Emirates)
Evangelos Dedousis (American University in Dubai, Dubai, United Arab Emirates)
Udo Braendle (Dubai Business School, University of Dubai, Dubai, United Arab Emirates)

Employee Relations

ISSN: 0142-5455

Article publication date: 8 March 2022

Issue publication date: 22 April 2022

514

Abstract

Purpose

Drawing upon social exchange theory and psychological contract (PC) research, this study aims to examine the impact of supervisors' fulfillment/non-fulfillment of transactional psychological contract (TPC) and relational psychological contract (RPC) promises on employees' reactions (e.g. feelings of violation, trust in the supervisor and organizational commitment) in a non-Western context, namely, the United Arab Emirates (UAE).

Design/methodology/approach

An experimental field design was used with a sample of employees (N = 234) from a wide range of nationalities and work backgrounds. Four conditions were developed by manipulating the fulfillment of three TPC promises (e.g. competitive salary) and three RPC promises (e.g. sufficient power and responsibility). Participants were randomly assigned to the four conditions and asked to complete the study materials as if they were experiencing a real employment situation with a real organization. Hypotheses were tested using multivariate analysis of covariance and follow-up univariate analysis with Bonferroni post hoc comparisons.

Findings

This study demonstrated that a supervisor's failure to fulfill promises pertinent to both TPC and RPC, or one of them, generated negative reactions among participants. Based on a comparison of means analysis, this study also established that breach of TPC promises produced a higher negative impact than breach of RPC promises on perceptions of breach, feelings of violation, trust in the supervisor, organizational perceptions, organizational commitment and recommendation intentions. Furthermore, these findings revealed that a supervisor's breach of RPC promises has no significant incremental (additive) effect above a supervisor's breach of TPC promises. On the other hand, a supervisor's breach of TPC promises has a significant incremental (additive) effect above a supervisor's breach of RPC promises.

Originality/value

This study is one of the very few studies that examined and established, under a controlled setting, the differential effects of fulfillment/non-fulfillment of both TPC and RPC promises on employees' breach perceptions, emotions, attitudes and behavioral intentions.

Keywords

Acknowledgements

The authors are thankful for the anonymous reviewers, associate editor and chief editor at the Employee Relations for their helpful feedback on this article. The authors also would like to extend their thanks to Aaron Schat, Mohamed Al-Waqfi and Zafer Akin for their helpful comments on an earlier version of this article.

Citation

Ababneh, K.I., Dedousis, E. and Braendle, U. (2022), "Employees' reactions to supervisors' fulfillment/non-fulfillment of psychological contract promises: an experimental field study", Employee Relations, Vol. 44 No. 4, pp. 948-971. https://doi.org/10.1108/ER-07-2020-0308

Publisher

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Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2022, Emerald Publishing Limited

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