Does Positive Affect Buffer the Associations between Job Insecurity and Work Engagement and Psychological Distress? A Test among South African Workers
Authors / Editors
Research Areas
Publication Details
Output type: Journal article
Author list: Vander Elst T, Bosman J, De Cuyper N, Stouten J, De Witte H
Publisher: Wiley
Publication year: 2013
Journal: Applied Psychology (0269-994X)
Volume number: 62
Issue number: 4
Start page: 558
End page: 570
Number of pages: 13
ISSN: 0269-994X
eISSN: 1464-0597
Languages: English-Great Britain (EN-GB)
Unpaywall Data
Open access status: closed
Abstract
This study aims to respond to earlier calls to study well-known concepts, more specifically, job insecurity, in less traditional (i.e. non-European, non-US) settings, as well as factors that may mitigate the aversive consequences of job insecurity for employees' work-related functioning. We investigate (1) the relationship between job insecurity and work engagement and psychological distress, and (2) the moderating role of positive affect in these relationships. Cross-sectional data from 296 employees in a South African government organisation were used to test the hypotheses. The results showed that job insecurity was negatively related to work engagement and positively to psychological distress. These relationships were buffered by positive affect.
Keywords
No matching items found.
Documents
No matching items found.