Inducements, Contributions, and Fulfillment in New Employee Psychological Contracts
Date
2011
Authors
Lee, Cynthia
Liu, Jun
Rousseau, Denise M
Hui, Chun
Chen, Zhen (George)
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Wiley-Blackwell
Abstract
This longitudinal study of newly hired Chinese college graduates (N = 143) investigates the effects of contract fulfillment, employee reports of company inducements (organizational support and job rewards), and supervisory reports of individual contributions (job performance and extra-role citizenship behavior) upon changes in the graduates' psychological contracts. Three survey waves were administered a year apart, starting with the recruits' job offer acceptance. Analyses revealed that employee fulfillment and perceived contributions predicted particular changes in employer psychological contract obligations, whereas employer fulfillment and perceived inducements predicted changes in employee obligations. The effects of inducements on employee obligation changes and contributions on employer obligation changes were mediated by their respective fulfillment measures. Changes in obligations were greater in the first year of employment than in the second. This study yields implications for managing newcomers and researching the initial phase of employment.
Description
Keywords
Keywords: Inducement contributions; Longitudinal study; Psychological contracts
Citation
Collections
Source
Human Resource Management
Type
Journal article
Book Title
Entity type
Access Statement
License Rights
Restricted until
2037-12-31
Downloads
File
Description