Job insecurity in a retail bank in South–Africa : scale validation and an exploration of negative attitudinal outcomes / Prinsloo M.

The objective of this study was, firstly, to investigate the reliability of a measure of qualitative and quantitative job insecurity and, secondly, to determine the relationship between qualitative and quantitative job insecurity, job satisfaction, affective organisational commitment, turnover inten...

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Main Author: Prinsloo, Mariechen
Published: North-West University 2012
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10394/7294
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spelling ndltd-NWUBOLOKA1-oai-dspace.nwu.ac.za-10394-72942014-04-16T03:56:57ZJob insecurity in a retail bank in South–Africa : scale validation and an exploration of negative attitudinal outcomes / Prinsloo M.Prinsloo, MariechenQualitative and quantitative job insecurityAffective organisational commitmentJob satisfactionTurnover intentionPersonalityPersonality dispositionsLocus of controlReliabilityKwalitatiewe en kwantitatiewe werksonsekerheidAffektiewe organisasietoewydingWerkstevredenheidVoorneme om te bedankPersoonlikheidseienskappeLokus van beheer en betroubaarheidThe objective of this study was, firstly, to investigate the reliability of a measure of qualitative and quantitative job insecurity and, secondly, to determine the relationship between qualitative and quantitative job insecurity, job satisfaction, affective organisational commitment, turnover intention and locus of control. A cross–sectional survey design was used which included participants randomly selected from a retail banking group across junior, supervisory and middle management levels (n=178). The job insecurity scales of Hellgren, Sverke and Isaksson (1999); job satisfaction scale of Hellgren, Sjöberg and Sverke (1997); affective organisational commitment scale of Allen and Meyer (1990); turnover intention scale of Sjöberg and Sverke (2001) and the locus of control scale of Levenson (1981) were administered. Descriptive statistics were used in order to analyse the data. Structural equivalence was used for the comparison of the factor structures of the job insecurity scale for the three language groups. Furthermore, in order to determine the relationships between the variables, the Pearson product–moment correlation coefficients were used, while the dependent variable turnover intention was predicted by means of a regression analysis. As indicated at the outset, two research articles form the basis of this mini–dissertation: Based on the first article, results indicate that both the qualitative and quantitative scale presented satisfactory levels of reliability across different language groups, and a relationship between these dimensions (quantitative and qualitative) was noticeable. However, the item “I think my future prospects and opportunities within the organisation are good” included in the qualitative job insecurity scale could well be problematic, the deduction being that language barriers probably played a role in participants’ interpretation of the question. According to the second article, both qualitative and quantitative job insecurity positively related to turnover intentions. Furthermore, job satisfaction reported a negative relationship with turnover intention, and a negative relationship between qualitative job insecurity and job satisfaction came to the fore. Locus of control, on the other hand, had a direct bearing on qualitative job insecurity, while only job satisfaction and quantitative job insecurity directly predicted employees’ turnover intention in the banking sector. Finally, locus of control seemingly had no mediating effect when predicting turnover intention. Based on the afore–going, this mini–dissertation will conclude by offering deductions and making recommendations for further research as well as offering possible solutions to the commercial banking sector as far as the retention of staff is concerned.Thesis (M.Com. (Human Resource Management))--North-West University, Potchefstroom Campus, 2012.North-West University2012-09-10T16:15:40Z2012-09-10T16:15:40Z2011Thesishttp://hdl.handle.net/10394/7294
collection NDLTD
sources NDLTD
topic Qualitative and quantitative job insecurity
Affective organisational commitment
Job satisfaction
Turnover intention
Personality
Personality dispositions
Locus of control
Reliability
Kwalitatiewe en kwantitatiewe werksonsekerheid
Affektiewe organisasietoewyding
Werkstevredenheid
Voorneme om te bedank
Persoonlikheidseienskappe
Lokus van beheer en betroubaarheid
spellingShingle Qualitative and quantitative job insecurity
Affective organisational commitment
Job satisfaction
Turnover intention
Personality
Personality dispositions
Locus of control
Reliability
Kwalitatiewe en kwantitatiewe werksonsekerheid
Affektiewe organisasietoewyding
Werkstevredenheid
Voorneme om te bedank
Persoonlikheidseienskappe
Lokus van beheer en betroubaarheid
Prinsloo, Mariechen
Job insecurity in a retail bank in South–Africa : scale validation and an exploration of negative attitudinal outcomes / Prinsloo M.
description The objective of this study was, firstly, to investigate the reliability of a measure of qualitative and quantitative job insecurity and, secondly, to determine the relationship between qualitative and quantitative job insecurity, job satisfaction, affective organisational commitment, turnover intention and locus of control. A cross–sectional survey design was used which included participants randomly selected from a retail banking group across junior, supervisory and middle management levels (n=178). The job insecurity scales of Hellgren, Sverke and Isaksson (1999); job satisfaction scale of Hellgren, Sjöberg and Sverke (1997); affective organisational commitment scale of Allen and Meyer (1990); turnover intention scale of Sjöberg and Sverke (2001) and the locus of control scale of Levenson (1981) were administered. Descriptive statistics were used in order to analyse the data. Structural equivalence was used for the comparison of the factor structures of the job insecurity scale for the three language groups. Furthermore, in order to determine the relationships between the variables, the Pearson product–moment correlation coefficients were used, while the dependent variable turnover intention was predicted by means of a regression analysis. As indicated at the outset, two research articles form the basis of this mini–dissertation: Based on the first article, results indicate that both the qualitative and quantitative scale presented satisfactory levels of reliability across different language groups, and a relationship between these dimensions (quantitative and qualitative) was noticeable. However, the item “I think my future prospects and opportunities within the organisation are good” included in the qualitative job insecurity scale could well be problematic, the deduction being that language barriers probably played a role in participants’ interpretation of the question. According to the second article, both qualitative and quantitative job insecurity positively related to turnover intentions. Furthermore, job satisfaction reported a negative relationship with turnover intention, and a negative relationship between qualitative job insecurity and job satisfaction came to the fore. Locus of control, on the other hand, had a direct bearing on qualitative job insecurity, while only job satisfaction and quantitative job insecurity directly predicted employees’ turnover intention in the banking sector. Finally, locus of control seemingly had no mediating effect when predicting turnover intention. Based on the afore–going, this mini–dissertation will conclude by offering deductions and making recommendations for further research as well as offering possible solutions to the commercial banking sector as far as the retention of staff is concerned. === Thesis (M.Com. (Human Resource Management))--North-West University, Potchefstroom Campus, 2012.
author Prinsloo, Mariechen
author_facet Prinsloo, Mariechen
author_sort Prinsloo, Mariechen
title Job insecurity in a retail bank in South–Africa : scale validation and an exploration of negative attitudinal outcomes / Prinsloo M.
title_short Job insecurity in a retail bank in South–Africa : scale validation and an exploration of negative attitudinal outcomes / Prinsloo M.
title_full Job insecurity in a retail bank in South–Africa : scale validation and an exploration of negative attitudinal outcomes / Prinsloo M.
title_fullStr Job insecurity in a retail bank in South–Africa : scale validation and an exploration of negative attitudinal outcomes / Prinsloo M.
title_full_unstemmed Job insecurity in a retail bank in South–Africa : scale validation and an exploration of negative attitudinal outcomes / Prinsloo M.
title_sort job insecurity in a retail bank in south–africa : scale validation and an exploration of negative attitudinal outcomes / prinsloo m.
publisher North-West University
publishDate 2012
url http://hdl.handle.net/10394/7294
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