Survivors' Reactions to Layoffs: We Get by with a Little Help for Our Friends
1987; SAGE Publishing; Volume: 32; Issue: 4 Linguagem: Inglês
10.2307/2392882
ISSN1930-3815
AutoresJoel Brockner, Steven L. Grover, Thomas F. Reed, Rocki Lee Dewitt, Michael N. O'Malley,
Tópico(s)Management and Organizational Studies
ResumoThe authors thank Gerald R. Salancik and three anonymous ASQ reviewers for their helpful comments on an earlier version of the manuscript. In addition, we thank the following individuals for their competent assistance during the data collection phase of the laboratory study: Mark Barnea, Robert Brady, Brad Crooke, John Denari, Nina Esaki, Steve Hickey, and Sung Ho Kim. Please address correspondence to: Joel Brockner, Graduate School of Business, Columbia University, New York, NY 10027. The research reported here used a multimethod approach to investigate the effects on survivors-i.e., the individuals who remain after a layoff has taken place-of their prior identification with and the organization's compensation to those laid off. Based on a justice theory framework, we hypothesized that survivors would exhibit the most negative reactions (from an organizational perspective) when they identified with the layoff victims and when they felt that the victims had not been well compensated. These two independent variables were manipulated in a laboratory study in which work performance served as the dependent variable. A field study was also used to survey employees who had survived a major layoff in their work organization. Included in the survey were measures of the independent variables, as well as the dependent variable: survivors' change in organizational commitment, relative to the pre-layoff period. As expected, survivors reacted most negatively when they identified with layoff victims who were perceived to have been inadequately compensated. The negative reaction took the form of reduced work performance in the lab study and lowered organizational commitment in the field study. Explanations, theoretical and practical implications, and avenues for further research are discussed.'
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