Multiple salary comparisons, distributive justice, and employee withdrawal.

J Appl Psychol

Beijing Key Laboratory of Behavior and Mental Health, School of Psychological and Cognitive Sciences, Peking University.

Published: October 2024

AI Article Synopsis

  • Salary comparisons greatly influence how employees feel about fairness at work and can lead to behaviors like leaving their job or reducing effort.
  • When employees receive mixed messages about their pay compared to others (e.g., some are paid more and some less), feeling underpaid compared to peers has a stronger impact on their sense of fairness than feeling overpaid.
  • The effects of these comparisons are particularly intense for those who view success as a zero-sum game, where one person's gain is another's loss, meaning those employees are more reactive to perceived disparities in salary.

Article Abstract

Salary comparison has well-established implications for employees' attitudes and behaviors at work. Yet how employees process information about simultaneous comparisons, particularly when internal and external comparison information is incongruent, remains controversial. In this article, we draw from the model of dispositional attribution and equity theory to predict how the incongruence of internal and external salary comparisons affects perceptions of distributive justice and subsequent employee withdrawal behavior. We hypothesized that the effect of salary comparisons on perceived distributive justice follows a hierarchically restrictive schema in which a lower salary in comparison to a referent has a greater effect than a higher salary. This further affects employee withdrawal (neglect, turnover intention, and voluntary turnover). We also propose that the effects of salary comparisons are bounded by employees' zero-sum construal of success. Three studies were conducted to test our hypotheses: a quasi-experimental study and two time-lagged field studies. Consistent with our hypotheses, we observed that, when comparison information was incongruent, underpayment compared with others more strongly affected perceived distributive justice than overpayment did. The subsequent impact on perceived distributive justice was negatively related to employee withdrawal. As expected, the effect of incongruent salary comparison information was stronger for employees with lower zero-sum construal of success. The theoretical and practical implications of these findings are discussed. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2024 APA, all rights reserved).

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1037/apl0001184DOI Listing

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