Document Type
Article
Publication Date
1-1-1996
Abstract
Employee shirking, where workers give less than full effort on the job, has typically been investigated as a construct subject to organization-level influences. Neglected are individual differences that could explain why employees in the same organization or work-group might shirk. Using a sample of workers from the health care profession in the United States, the present study sought to address these limitations by investigating subjective well-being (a dispositional construct), job satisfaction, as well as other individual-level determinants of shirking. Results indicate that whites shirk significantly more than nonwhites, and that subjective well-being, job satisfaction, and age have significant, negative effects on shirking. The implications of these results are discussed.
Publication Source (Journal or Book title)
Relations Industrielles
First Page
468
Last Page
486
Recommended Citation
Judge, T., & Chandler, T. (1996). Individual-Level Determinants of Employee Shirking. Relations Industrielles, 51 (3), 468-486. https://doi.org/10.7202/051112ar