Open Access Open Access  Restricted Access Subscription Access
Open Access Open Access Open Access  Restricted Access Restricted Access Subscription Access

Relationship Between Perceived Job Stress, Work-Family Conflict, and Organizational Commitment in the Indian Context:A Preliminary Investigation


Affiliations
1 Department of Psychology, R. D. National College, Bandra West, Mumbai, Maharashtra, India
     

   Subscribe/Renew Journal


An important theoretical construct that needs significant attention in organizational psychology is work-family balance. This is primarily due to substantial modifications families and work spaces have undergone such as increase in dual-career couples and rise in the percentage of working mothers with young children (Bond, Galinsky, & Swanberg, 1998; Gilbert, Hallett, & Eldridge, 1994; as cited in Allen, Herst, Bruck, & Sutton, 2000). Greenhaus, Collins and Shaw (2003) have conceptualized work-family balance as the degree to which equal engagement and equal satisfaction is experienced in both the work and domestic spheres with respect to one's roles. Other researchers (e.g., Frone, 2003; Quick et al., 2004) conceptualize this variable as indicative of lack of conflict across the two domams. In other words, work-family balance can be seen as the converse of work-family conflict, which reflects incompatibility mrole pressures across work and domestic spheres (Greenhaus & Beutell, 1985). Greenhaus and Beutell (1985) reviewed a substantial literature (e.g., Bartolome & Evans, 1980; Burke et al., 1980; Jones & Butler, 1980; Kopelman et al., 1983) and highlighted the role of work-related stressors such as role ambiguity, participation in boundary-spanning activities, communication stress, lack of mental concentration, speed of organizational environment change, task autonomy, coping with a new job, job-related misfit (competence misfit, enjoyment misfit, moral misfit) to be associated with escalation of work-family conflict/ negative spillover Based on the prior literature they proposed a comprehensive model which takes into account the role of these work-related stressors as engendering strain-based conflict, an important dimension of work-family conflict. Similarly, certain studies have obtained a significant association between job stress and organizational commitment, often pointing towards a negative association between these two variables. The current study is essentially a preliminary investigation, which attempts to examine the relationship between perceived job stress, work-family conflict, and organizational commitment among employees in the Indian context. 60 participants completed the informed consent form and the demographic sheet along with the following questionnaires: Subjective Job Stress Scale (SJSS; Motowidlo, Packard, & Manning, 1986); Work-Family Conflict Scale (Gutek, Searle, & Klepa, 1991); and Organizational Commitment Scale (Allen & Meyer, 1990).The Subjective Job Stress Scale, a 4-item scale, assesses perceptions of job-related stress. The Work-Family Conflict Scale, which includes 8 items, assesses the construct along two dimensions: Family Interference with Work (FIW) and Work Interference with Family (WIF). Finally, the Organizational Commitment Scale measures three components of organizational commitment, namely, affective commitment, normative commitment, and continuance commitment (see Allen & Meyer, 1990; Meyer & Allen, 1997). It was hypothesized that (a) higher levels of job stress will be associated with higher levels of work-family conflict and vice versa; (b) higher levels of job stress will be associated with lower levels of organizational commitment and vice versa; (c) higher levels of work-family conflict will be associated with lower levels of organizational commitment and vice versa; and(d) There will be no significant gender difference with respect to the aforementioned three variables, namely, perceived job stress, work-family conflict, and organizational commitment. Relevant statistical techniques such as One-way ANOVA and Pearson Product Moment Correlation were employed to analyze the data obtained in the current study. The emerging findings have been explained using an existing body of empirical literature. Implications of the current study for both the theory and the practice of organizational behavior have been discussed in this paper.

Keywords

Job Stress, Work-Family Conflict, Organizational Commitment, Gender Difference.
Subscription Login to verify subscription
User
Notifications
Font Size


  • Ahmad, A. (1998). Gender differences in the boundary permeability between work and family roles. Pertanika Journal of Social Science and Humanities, 6(1): 43-49.
  • Al-Ajmi, R. (2006). The effect of gender on job satisfaction and organizational commitment in kuwait. International Journal of Management, 23(4), 838-844.
  • Allen, J. N., & Meyer, J. P (1990). The measurement and antecedents of affective, continuance and normative commitment to the organization. Journal of Occupational Psychology, 63(1), 1-18.
  • Anderson-Kulman, R. E., & Paludi, M. A. (1986). Working mothers and the family context: Predicting positive coping.Journal of Vocational Behavior, 25, 241-253.
  • Angle, H. L., & Perry, J. L. (1981). An empirical assessment of organization commitment and organizational effectiveness. Administrative Science Quarterly, 26,1-14.
  • Aven, F, Parker, B., & McEvoy, G. (1993). Gender and attitudinal commitment to organizations: a meta-analysis.Journal of Business Research, 26,49-61.
  • Bartolome, F, & Evans, P. A. L. (1980). Must success cost so much? Harvard Business Review, 58(2), 137-148.
  • Burke, R. J., Weir, T, & Duwors, R. E. (1980). Work demands on administrators and spouse well-being.
  • Human Relations, 33, 253-278.
  • Fisher, R J. (1993). Social desirability bias and the validity of indirect questioning. Journal of Consumer Research, 20(2), 303-315.
  • Frone, M. R., Russell, M., & Cooper, M. L. (1992). Prevalence of work-family conflict: Are work and family boundaries asymmetrically permeable? Journal of Organizational Behavior 13(7), 723-729.
  • Good, L. K., Sisler, G. F , & Gentry, J. W (1988). Antecedents of turnover intentions among retail management personnel. Journal of Retailing, 64, 295-314.
  • Greenhaus, J. H., & Beutell, N. J. (1985). Sources of conflict between work and family roles. Academy of Management Review, 10, 76-88.
  • Gutek,B.A.,Searle,S.,& Klepa,L.(1991).Rational versus gender role explanations for work-family conflict.Joumal of Applied Psychology, 76, 560-568.
  • Gyllensten, K., & Palmer, S. (2005). The role of gender in workplace stress: A critical literature review?Health Education Journal, 64(3), 271-288.
  • Hall, D.T, & Richter, J. (1988). Balancing work life and home life: What can organizations do to help?Academy of Management Executive, 3, 213-223.
  • Jamadin, N., Mohamad, S., Syarkawi, Z., & Noordin, F (2015). Work - family conflict and stress: Evidence from Malaysia. Journal of Economics. Business and Management, 3(2),309-312.
  • Jones, A.P, & Butler, M.C. (1980). A role transition approach to the stresses of organizationally-induced family role disruption. Journal of Marriage and the Family, 42, 367-376.
  • Kaldenberg, D., Becker, B., & Zvonkovic, A. (1995). Work and commitment among young professionals: A study of male and female dentists. Human Relations, 48(11), 1355-1377.
  • Khalili, A., & Asmavi, A. (2012). Appraising the impact of gender differences on organizational commitment: Empirical evidence from a private SME in Iran. International Journal of Business and Management, 7(5), 100-110.
  • Kim, J.L.S., & Ling, C.S. (2001). Work-family conflict of women entrepreneurs in Singapore. Women in Management Review, 16, 204-221.
  • Kopelman, R E., Greenhaus, J. H., & Connolly T F (1983). A model of work, family, and inter role conflict: A construct validation study Organizational Behavior and Human Performance, 32, 198-215.
  • Lyness, K. S., & Thompson, D. E. (1997). Above the glass ceiling? A comparison of matched samples of female and male executives.Journal of Applied Psychology, 359-375.
  • Marsden, P, Kalleberg, A., & Cook, C. (1993). Gender differences in organizational commitment: Influences of work positions and family roles. Work and Occupations, 20(3), 368-390.
  • Mathieu, J., & Zajac, D. (1990). A review and meta-analysis of the antecedents, correlates, and consequences of organizational commitment. Psychological Bulletin, 108, 171-194.
  • Motowidlo, S.J., Packard, J.S., & Manning, M.R (1986). Occupational stress: Its causes and consequences for job performance. Journal of Applied Psychology, 71, 618-629.
  • Nart, S., & Batur, O. (2013). The relation between work-family conflict, job stress, organizational commitment and job performance: A study of Turkish primary teachers. European Joumal of Research on Education, 2(2),72-81.
  • Netemeyer,R.G.,Boles, J. S., & McMurrian,R. (1996). Development and validation of work-family conflicts and work-family conflict scales. Journal of Applied Psychology, 81, 400-410.
  • Netemeyer, R.G., Brashear-Alejandro, T, & Boles, J.S. (2004). A cross-national model of job-related outcomes of work role and family role variables: A retail sales context. Academy of Marketing Science Journal, 32(1), 49-60.
  • Ngo, H., & Tsang, A. (1998). Employment practices and organizational commitment: differential effects for men and women? International Journal of Organizational Analysis, 6(3): 251-266.
  • O'Driscoll, D., Ilgen, D.R., & Hildreth, K. (1992). Time devoted to job and off-job activities, interrole conflict, and affective experiences. Journal of Applied Psychology, 77, 272-279.
  • Pleck, J. H. (1977). The work-family role system. Social Problems, 24, 417-427.
  • Suki,N. M.,& Suki,N.M. (2011). Job satisfaction and organizational commitment: The effect of gender. lnternational Journal of Psychology Research, 6(5), 1-15.

Abstract Views: 299

PDF Views: 0




  • Relationship Between Perceived Job Stress, Work-Family Conflict, and Organizational Commitment in the Indian Context:A Preliminary Investigation

Abstract Views: 299  |  PDF Views: 0

Authors

Meghna Basu Thakur
Department of Psychology, R. D. National College, Bandra West, Mumbai, Maharashtra, India

Abstract


An important theoretical construct that needs significant attention in organizational psychology is work-family balance. This is primarily due to substantial modifications families and work spaces have undergone such as increase in dual-career couples and rise in the percentage of working mothers with young children (Bond, Galinsky, & Swanberg, 1998; Gilbert, Hallett, & Eldridge, 1994; as cited in Allen, Herst, Bruck, & Sutton, 2000). Greenhaus, Collins and Shaw (2003) have conceptualized work-family balance as the degree to which equal engagement and equal satisfaction is experienced in both the work and domestic spheres with respect to one's roles. Other researchers (e.g., Frone, 2003; Quick et al., 2004) conceptualize this variable as indicative of lack of conflict across the two domams. In other words, work-family balance can be seen as the converse of work-family conflict, which reflects incompatibility mrole pressures across work and domestic spheres (Greenhaus & Beutell, 1985). Greenhaus and Beutell (1985) reviewed a substantial literature (e.g., Bartolome & Evans, 1980; Burke et al., 1980; Jones & Butler, 1980; Kopelman et al., 1983) and highlighted the role of work-related stressors such as role ambiguity, participation in boundary-spanning activities, communication stress, lack of mental concentration, speed of organizational environment change, task autonomy, coping with a new job, job-related misfit (competence misfit, enjoyment misfit, moral misfit) to be associated with escalation of work-family conflict/ negative spillover Based on the prior literature they proposed a comprehensive model which takes into account the role of these work-related stressors as engendering strain-based conflict, an important dimension of work-family conflict. Similarly, certain studies have obtained a significant association between job stress and organizational commitment, often pointing towards a negative association between these two variables. The current study is essentially a preliminary investigation, which attempts to examine the relationship between perceived job stress, work-family conflict, and organizational commitment among employees in the Indian context. 60 participants completed the informed consent form and the demographic sheet along with the following questionnaires: Subjective Job Stress Scale (SJSS; Motowidlo, Packard, & Manning, 1986); Work-Family Conflict Scale (Gutek, Searle, & Klepa, 1991); and Organizational Commitment Scale (Allen & Meyer, 1990).The Subjective Job Stress Scale, a 4-item scale, assesses perceptions of job-related stress. The Work-Family Conflict Scale, which includes 8 items, assesses the construct along two dimensions: Family Interference with Work (FIW) and Work Interference with Family (WIF). Finally, the Organizational Commitment Scale measures three components of organizational commitment, namely, affective commitment, normative commitment, and continuance commitment (see Allen & Meyer, 1990; Meyer & Allen, 1997). It was hypothesized that (a) higher levels of job stress will be associated with higher levels of work-family conflict and vice versa; (b) higher levels of job stress will be associated with lower levels of organizational commitment and vice versa; (c) higher levels of work-family conflict will be associated with lower levels of organizational commitment and vice versa; and(d) There will be no significant gender difference with respect to the aforementioned three variables, namely, perceived job stress, work-family conflict, and organizational commitment. Relevant statistical techniques such as One-way ANOVA and Pearson Product Moment Correlation were employed to analyze the data obtained in the current study. The emerging findings have been explained using an existing body of empirical literature. Implications of the current study for both the theory and the practice of organizational behavior have been discussed in this paper.

Keywords


Job Stress, Work-Family Conflict, Organizational Commitment, Gender Difference.

References