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Growing Science » Authors » Emmanuel A. Otoo

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1.

Antecedents and consequence of employee turnover intention: Empirical evidence from Ghana Pages 781-796 Right click to download the paper Download PDF

Authors: Michael A. Gyensare, Emmanuel A. Otoo, Joan-Ark Asare, Evelyn Twumasi

DOI: 10.5267/j.msl.2015.5.010

Keywords: Accountable absence legitimacy, Commitment, Reasoned action theory, Satisfaction, Turnover intention

Abstract:
Guided by the theory of reasoned action, this study found support for the hypothesized inverse relationship between work-related factors and employee turnover intention on the one hand, and turnover intention and perceptions of accountable absence legitimacy on the other hand. Specifically, the higher employees’ turnover intent, the lower their perceptions about the accountability of their absence behavior and vice versa. The findings highlight the need to consider turnover intention as a salient construct that plays a dual role, first as a consequence variable to job satisfaction, affective and normative commitments, and next as an antecedent to accountable absence legitimacy in the workplace. The article concludes with a discussion on the significance of lessening employee turnover intent as a means of mitigating the perceptions of absence legitimacy in the workplace.
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Journal: MSL | Year: 2015 | Volume: 5 | Issue: 8 | Views: 3957 | Reviews: 0

 

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