Felipe Muñoz Medina, Sergio Andrés López Bohle, Jeske Van Beurden, M. J. Chambel, S. Ugarte
{"title":"The relationship between job insecurity and employee performance: a systematic literature review and research agenda","authors":"Felipe Muñoz Medina, Sergio Andrés López Bohle, Jeske Van Beurden, M. J. Chambel, S. Ugarte","doi":"10.1108/cdi-06-2022-0164","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"PurposeAlthough research on job insecurity (JI) and its relationship with employee performance has increased in recent years, results are mixed and inconclusive. The objectives of this paper are to explore 1) the conceptualizations of JI, 2) the relationship between JI and different performance dimensions, 3) the theoretical perspectives used to explain the JI–performance relationship and 4) the mechanisms and contextual boundaries that affect the JI–performance relationship.Design/methodology/approachFollowing the PRISMA guidelines, the authors systematically searched for peer-reviewed empirical studies published before July 2021 in Web of Science and Scopus. The authors analyzed 81 empirical studies published on the conceptualization of job insecurity, its relationship with employee performance, and what mechanisms and contingency factors are studied. The authors used thematic analysis to analyze the articles.FindingsResults of this review show that the quantitative cognitive dimension is dominant in extant JI literature. Furthermore, in-role performance and OCB were most often investigated in relation to the four dimensions of job insecurity, drawing from a range of theoretical perspectives to explain this relationship. Moreover, a variety of mechanisms and contextual factors on individual, individual work-related, individual-level attitudes and job-level characteristics have found to play a role in this relationship.Research limitations/implicationsThis study has a number of limitations. The first pertains to the exclusion of articles in languages other than English and non-peer reviewed papers. It is possible that the search strategy used may not have identified other studies that may have met the established criteria in order to be included in our research. However, this method was chosen to guarantee the quality of the included articles in this study and in line with previous meta-analyses and literature reviews (De Witte et al., 2016; Sverke et al., 2019). Second, one selection criteria focused on how performance was assessed in the studies incorporated in this literature review. The authors excluded studies that addressed performance from the perspective of the organization (i.e. studies that measured performance at the organizational level). The authors herewith might have excluded studies that focused on one or multiple job insecurity constructs, but the authors herewith included studies that were comparable in terms of performance indicator outcomes. Future studies could expand the search by investigating, as a next step, the impact on organizational performance. Finally, since the focus of this literature review was on the relationship between job insecurity and performance indicators, including the mechanisms and boundary conditions that affect this relationship, the authors did not include focus on how job insecurity can be influenced (Shoss, 2017), and herewith lack information on the predictors side of job insecurity. However, by narrowing the authors focus to mediators and moderators, the authors were able to come up with an extensive list of factors that impact the job insecurity–performance relationship and herewith provide fruitful areas for future research. Future studies could expand these findings by providing an overview of predictors of different job insecurity constructs, to see whether there are potential different predictors of job insecurity conceptualizations (Jiang and Lavaysse, 2018).Practical implicationsThe study review contributes to the systematization of the current empirical evidence on this area of research. This is especially important and enables room to take an additional step toward understanding the consequences of job insecurity on performance. Specifically, it is important for organizations and policymakers to be aware of the different conceptualizations of job insecurity that exist and how they impact employee performance. In addition, an overview of potential mechanisms and boundary conditions that affect this relationship provides insights as to how organizations can intervene to affect reactions to job insecurity.Social implicationsThe study findings are relevant and may be of interest to decision makers in organizations and national authorities that must have information on quality concerning the effects of job insecurity on performance.Originality/valueBased on these findings the authors show the impact of the different conceptualizations of job insecurity and how they affect job performance. In addition, the authors provide recommendations for future studies how to better handle the integration of different conceptualizations and measures of job insecurity and its different approaches.","PeriodicalId":9597,"journal":{"name":"Career Development International","volume":null,"pages":null},"PeriodicalIF":3.4000,"publicationDate":"2023-08-24","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Career Development International","FirstCategoryId":"91","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.1108/cdi-06-2022-0164","RegionNum":3,"RegionCategory":"管理学","ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q2","JCRName":"MANAGEMENT","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
PurposeAlthough research on job insecurity (JI) and its relationship with employee performance has increased in recent years, results are mixed and inconclusive. The objectives of this paper are to explore 1) the conceptualizations of JI, 2) the relationship between JI and different performance dimensions, 3) the theoretical perspectives used to explain the JI–performance relationship and 4) the mechanisms and contextual boundaries that affect the JI–performance relationship.Design/methodology/approachFollowing the PRISMA guidelines, the authors systematically searched for peer-reviewed empirical studies published before July 2021 in Web of Science and Scopus. The authors analyzed 81 empirical studies published on the conceptualization of job insecurity, its relationship with employee performance, and what mechanisms and contingency factors are studied. The authors used thematic analysis to analyze the articles.FindingsResults of this review show that the quantitative cognitive dimension is dominant in extant JI literature. Furthermore, in-role performance and OCB were most often investigated in relation to the four dimensions of job insecurity, drawing from a range of theoretical perspectives to explain this relationship. Moreover, a variety of mechanisms and contextual factors on individual, individual work-related, individual-level attitudes and job-level characteristics have found to play a role in this relationship.Research limitations/implicationsThis study has a number of limitations. The first pertains to the exclusion of articles in languages other than English and non-peer reviewed papers. It is possible that the search strategy used may not have identified other studies that may have met the established criteria in order to be included in our research. However, this method was chosen to guarantee the quality of the included articles in this study and in line with previous meta-analyses and literature reviews (De Witte et al., 2016; Sverke et al., 2019). Second, one selection criteria focused on how performance was assessed in the studies incorporated in this literature review. The authors excluded studies that addressed performance from the perspective of the organization (i.e. studies that measured performance at the organizational level). The authors herewith might have excluded studies that focused on one or multiple job insecurity constructs, but the authors herewith included studies that were comparable in terms of performance indicator outcomes. Future studies could expand the search by investigating, as a next step, the impact on organizational performance. Finally, since the focus of this literature review was on the relationship between job insecurity and performance indicators, including the mechanisms and boundary conditions that affect this relationship, the authors did not include focus on how job insecurity can be influenced (Shoss, 2017), and herewith lack information on the predictors side of job insecurity. However, by narrowing the authors focus to mediators and moderators, the authors were able to come up with an extensive list of factors that impact the job insecurity–performance relationship and herewith provide fruitful areas for future research. Future studies could expand these findings by providing an overview of predictors of different job insecurity constructs, to see whether there are potential different predictors of job insecurity conceptualizations (Jiang and Lavaysse, 2018).Practical implicationsThe study review contributes to the systematization of the current empirical evidence on this area of research. This is especially important and enables room to take an additional step toward understanding the consequences of job insecurity on performance. Specifically, it is important for organizations and policymakers to be aware of the different conceptualizations of job insecurity that exist and how they impact employee performance. In addition, an overview of potential mechanisms and boundary conditions that affect this relationship provides insights as to how organizations can intervene to affect reactions to job insecurity.Social implicationsThe study findings are relevant and may be of interest to decision makers in organizations and national authorities that must have information on quality concerning the effects of job insecurity on performance.Originality/valueBased on these findings the authors show the impact of the different conceptualizations of job insecurity and how they affect job performance. In addition, the authors provide recommendations for future studies how to better handle the integration of different conceptualizations and measures of job insecurity and its different approaches.
虽然近年来对工作不安全感及其与员工绩效关系的研究有所增加,但结果却参差不齐,尚无定论。本文的目的是探讨1)智能智能的概念,2)智能智能与不同绩效维度的关系,3)用于解释智能智能绩效关系的理论视角,以及4)影响智能智能绩效关系的机制和上下文边界。根据PRISMA指南,作者系统地检索了2021年7月之前在Web of Science和Scopus上发表的同行评议的实证研究。作者分析了81篇关于工作不安全感概念、工作不安全感与员工绩效的关系、工作不安全感研究的机制和偶然性因素的实证研究。作者运用主题分析法对文章进行分析。结果表明,定量认知维度在现有文献中占主导地位。此外,角色内绩效和组织公民行为最常被研究与工作不安全感的四个维度的关系,并从一系列理论角度解释这种关系。此外,个体、个人工作相关、个人层面态度和工作层面特征的多种机制和情境因素在这一关系中发挥了作用。研究的局限性/意义这项研究有许多局限性。第一个问题涉及排除英语以外语言的文章和非同行评议的论文。有可能使用的搜索策略可能没有确定其他可能符合既定标准的研究,以便纳入我们的研究。然而,选择这种方法是为了保证本研究纳入文章的质量,并符合先前的荟萃分析和文献综述(De Witte et al., 2016;Sverke et al., 2019)。其次,一个选择标准侧重于如何在本文献综述中纳入的研究中评估绩效。作者排除了从组织的角度来研究绩效的研究(即在组织层面上衡量绩效的研究)。作者在本文中可能排除了关注一种或多种工作不安全感结构的研究,但作者在本文中纳入了在绩效指标结果方面具有可比性的研究。作为下一步,未来的研究可以通过调查对组织绩效的影响来扩大研究范围。最后,由于本文献综述的重点是工作不安全感与绩效指标之间的关系,包括影响这种关系的机制和边界条件,作者没有关注工作不安全感如何受到影响(Shoss, 2017),因此缺乏关于工作不安全感预测因素方面的信息。然而,通过将作者的重点缩小到中介和调节,作者能够提出一个影响工作不安全感-绩效关系的因素的广泛列表,从而为未来的研究提供富有成效的领域。未来的研究可以通过概述不同工作不安全感结构的预测因子来扩展这些发现,看看是否存在潜在的不同的工作不安全感概念化预测因子(Jiang和Lavaysse, 2018)。实践意义本研究综述有助于将该研究领域的现有经验证据系统化。这一点尤其重要,也为进一步了解工作不安全感对绩效的影响提供了空间。具体来说,对于组织和政策制定者来说,重要的是要意识到存在的工作不安全感的不同概念以及它们如何影响员工的绩效。此外,对影响这种关系的潜在机制和边界条件的概述提供了关于组织如何干预以影响对工作不安全感的反应的见解。社会意义研究结果是相关的,可能对组织和国家当局的决策者感兴趣,他们必须掌握有关工作不安全感对绩效影响的质量信息。原创性/价值基于这些发现,作者展示了工作不安全感的不同概念的影响以及它们如何影响工作绩效。此外,作者对未来研究如何更好地处理工作不安全感的不同概念和测量及其不同方法的整合提出了建议。
期刊介绍:
Careers and Development are inter-related fields of study with connections to many academic disciplines, organizational practices and policy developments in the emerging knowledge economies and learning societies of the modern world. Career Development International provides a platform for research in these areas that deals with questions of theories and theory development, as well as with organizational career strategy, policy and practice. Issues of theory and of practice may be dealt with at individual, organizational and society levels. The international character of submissions may have two aspects. Submissions may be international in their scope, dealing with a topic that is of concern to researchers throughout the world rather than of sole interest to a national audience. Alternatively, submissions may be international in content, relating, for example, to comparative analyses of careers and development across national boundaries, or dealing with inherently ''international'' issues such as expatriation. Coverage: -Individual careers - psychological and developmental perspectives -Career interventions (systems and tools, mentoring, etc) -Government policy and practices -HR planning and recruitment -International themes and issues (MNCs, expatriation, etc) -Organizational strategies and systems -Performance management -Work and occupational contexts