Jurnal Siasat Bisnis
Vol. 11 No. 3 (2006)

Effect of Distributive Justice on The Relationship between The Forms of Benefit Program and Job Commitment

Azman Ismail (Unknown)
Chong Siaw Joon (Unknown)



Article Info

Publish Date
30 Mar 2009

Abstract

This study was conducted to examine the moderating effect of distributive justice in the relationship between the forms of benefits program and job commitment. A survey research method was used to gather 150 usable questionnaires from employees who have worked in Malaysian federal government linked companies in Sarawak (MFGLS). The outcomes of testing moderating model using a hierarchical regression analysis showed two major findings: (1) distributive justice had not increased the effect of physical and safety benefits (i.e., health care, insurance, loan and claim) on job commitment, and (2) distributive justice had increased the effect of self-satisfaction benefits (i.e., promotion opportunity and training) on job commitment. This result confirms that distributive justice does act as a partial moderating variable in the benefit program models of the organizational sector sample. In addition, the implications of this study to benefit system theory and practice, methodological and conceptual limitations, and directions for future research are also discussed. Keywords: Forms of Benefits Program, Distributive Justice and Job Commitment

Copyrights © 2006






Journal Info

Abbrev

JSB

Publisher

Subject

Decision Sciences, Operations Research & Management Social Sciences

Description

Jurnal Siasat Bisnis (JSB) is a peer review journal published twice a year (January and July) by Management Development Centre (MDC)-Department of Management, Faculty of Economics, Universitas Islam Indonesia. JSB) addresses the broad area of management science and its applications in industry and ...