Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
886911 Journal of Vocational Behavior 2012 10 Pages PDF
Abstract

This study examined the role of the latent and financial benefits of work as defined by Marie Jahoda (1982) in explaining a person's work involvement. Drawing upon theoretical frameworks on work commitment and work motivation, the latent benefits were expected to have a positive, whereas the financial benefits were expected to have a negative impact on work involvement. The results of longitudinal cross-lagged structural equation modeling using 4 waves of data from a sample of 260 employees provided strong support for the positive impact of the latent benefits on a person's work involvement. The negative effect of the financial benefits was not significant. The findings suggest that social institutions can contribute to a person's work involvement by the amount of access to the latent benefits they provide.

► We examined the role of Jahoda's latent and financial benefits for work involvement in a four-wave study. ► Latent benefits had a positive impact on a person's work involvement. ► Financial benefits had a slightly, but non-significant, negative impact on work involvement.

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