Subjective well-being, COVID-19 and financial strain following job loss: stretching the role of human resource management to focus on human sustainability beyond the workplace

IF 3.9 3区 管理学 Q1 INDUSTRIAL RELATIONS & LABOR Asia Pacific Journal of Human Resources Pub Date : 2023-07-03 DOI:10.1111/1744-7941.12384
Zahid Hameed, Thomas Noel Garavan, Rana Muhammad Naeem, Muhammad Burhan, Muhammad Farrukh Moin, Thomas McCabe
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Abstract

The unprecedented COVID-19 pandemic resulted in significant negative consequences for employee well-being across the globe, including job loss leading to significant financial strain. Job loss and financial strain have important implications for the role of human resource management (HRM) in achieving human sustainability beyond the employment relationship given that decreased subjective well-being was driven by financial strain. The two studies reported here – one quantitative and one qualitative – investigate the impact of financial strain arising from job loss due to COVID-19 on subjective well-being of tourism and hospitality employees in Pakistan. The first study used survey data collected from a sample of 284 employees laid off during the early stages of the pandemic to test a model of the relationship between financial strain and subjective well-being mediated by negative affectivity and moderated by core self-evaluations. The second study qualitatively investigated the long-term impact of job loss on financial strain with a sample of 30 respondents who completed the survey in study 1. We found in study 1 a strong negative relationship between financial strain and subjective well-being that was mediated through negative affectivity. Core self-evaluations acted as a buffer on the relationship between financial strain and negative affectivity and the overall negative indirect relationship between financial strain and subjective well-being via negative affectivity. In study 2 we found that financial strain was a long-term problem arising from job loss due to COVID-19 and that employees who lost their jobs drew on a wide range of contextual and personal resources to mitigate the impacts of financial strain on long-term subjective well-being. We discuss the implications for HRM theory and practice.

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主观幸福感、新冠肺炎和失业后的经济压力:扩大人力资源管理的作用,将重点放在工作场所以外的人类可持续性上
史无前例的 COVID-19 大流行给全球各地的员工福利带来了严重的负面影响,包括失业导致的巨大经济压力。由于经济压力导致主观幸福感下降,因此失业和经济压力对人力资源管理(HRM)在实现雇用关系之外的人类可持续发展方面的作用具有重要影响。本文报告的两项研究--一项定量研究和一项定性研究--调查了因 COVID-19 导致失业而产生的经济压力对巴基斯坦旅游业和酒店业员工主观幸福感的影响。第一项研究使用了从大流行病早期阶段被解雇的 284 名员工中收集的调查数据,以检验经济压力与主观幸福感之间的关系模型,该模型以消极情绪为中介,并受到核心自我评价的调节。第二项研究以完成第一项研究调查的 30 名受访者为样本,定性调查了失业对经济压力的长期影响。我们在研究 1 中发现,经济压力与主观幸福感之间存在着强烈的负相关关系,这种关系通过负情感进行调节。核心自我评价对经济压力与负面情绪之间的关系起到了缓冲作用,并通过负面情绪间接调节了经济压力与主观幸福感之间的整体负相关关系。在研究 2 中,我们发现经济压力是 COVID-19 导致的失业所引发的长期问题,而失业员工则利用各种环境和个人资源来减轻经济压力对长期主观幸福感的影响。我们讨论了这对人力资源管理理论和实践的影响。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
7.20
自引率
9.40%
发文量
40
期刊介绍: The Asia Pacific Journal of Human Resources adheres to a rigorous double-blind reviewing policy in which the identity of both the reviewer and author are always concealed from both parties. Asia Pacific Journal of Human Resources is an applied, peer-reviewed journal which aims to communicate the development and practice of the field of human resources within the Asia Pacific region. The journal publishes the results of research, theoretical and conceptual developments, and examples of current practice. The overall aim is to increase the understanding of the management of human resource in an organisational setting.
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