Título
The link between HIWPs and well-being at work: the mediating role of trustVersión
Postprint
Derechos
© Emerald Publishing LimitedAcceso
Acceso abiertoVersión del editor
https://doi.org/10.1108/ER-05-2020-0223Publicado en
Employee Relations Vol. 43. N. 4, 2021Editor
Emerald Publishing LimitedPalabras clave
Human capital (HC) theory
High-involvement work practices (HIWP)
Trust in management
Well-being at work ... [+]
High-involvement work practices (HIWP)
Trust in management
Well-being at work ... [+]
Human capital (HC) theory
High-involvement work practices (HIWP)
Trust in management
Well-being at work
Job satisfaction (JS)
Affective commitment (AC)
Structural equation modeling (SEM) [-]
High-involvement work practices (HIWP)
Trust in management
Well-being at work
Job satisfaction (JS)
Affective commitment (AC)
Structural equation modeling (SEM) [-]
Resumen
Purpose – This paper examines the extent to which investment in human capital (HC) influences employee well-being, focusing on companies in the Basque Country in Northern Spain. Specifically, it analy ... [+]
Purpose – This paper examines the extent to which investment in human capital (HC) influences employee well-being, focusing on companies in the Basque Country in Northern Spain. Specifically, it analyzes the effects of worker perceptions of high-involvement work system (HIWS) on job satisfaction (JS) and affective commitment (AC), directly and through the mediating role of trust in management. This trust mediating role was also explored by analyzing the isolated effects of high-involvement work processes (power, information, reward and knowledge [PIRK] enhancing practices) on JS and AC.
Design/methodology/approach – The structural equation modeling (SEM) approach was used on a sample of 2,199 employees from 425 organizations working in different industries. As the study was performed at the organizational level, aggregation was conducted first.
Findings – The findings revealed that trust partially mediated the relationship between HIWS and JS, although AC was directly predicted by the system. In contrast, a trust mediating role was confirmed in the relationship between all PIRK processes, JS and AC.
Originality/value –This study highlights the “hinge”role of trust in linking high-involvement work practices (HIWPs) as an approach to assess HC in organizations and well-being at work. It further conceptualizes HIWS via a PIRK model and operationalizes it through systemic and dimensional approach. [-]