Organizational Ethnic Diversity's Influence on Hotel Employees' Satisfaction, Commitment, and Turnover Intention: Gender's Moderating Role
Author(s)
Hsiao, Aaron
Ma, Emily Jintao
Lloyd, Kathleen
Reid, Sacha
Year published
2019
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
© The Author(s) 2019. The aim of this study was to explore whether Taiwanese hospitality workers’ gender moderates the relationship between perceived ethnic diversity levels within their workplace and work-related outcomes at an individual employee level. Data were collected from 371 employees across 26 hotels in Taiwan. The results supported mediation effects of job satisfaction and affective commitment on the relationship between perceived ethnic diversity and employees’ turnover intention. Gender moderated the relationships between perceived diversity and job satisfaction, affective commitment and the relationships between ...
View more >© The Author(s) 2019. The aim of this study was to explore whether Taiwanese hospitality workers’ gender moderates the relationship between perceived ethnic diversity levels within their workplace and work-related outcomes at an individual employee level. Data were collected from 371 employees across 26 hotels in Taiwan. The results supported mediation effects of job satisfaction and affective commitment on the relationship between perceived ethnic diversity and employees’ turnover intention. Gender moderated the relationships between perceived diversity and job satisfaction, affective commitment and the relationships between job satisfaction and turnover intention. This study highlights the importance of ethnic diversity impacts on employee work outcomes within Asian hospitality organizations, specifically in Taiwan.
View less >
View more >© The Author(s) 2019. The aim of this study was to explore whether Taiwanese hospitality workers’ gender moderates the relationship between perceived ethnic diversity levels within their workplace and work-related outcomes at an individual employee level. Data were collected from 371 employees across 26 hotels in Taiwan. The results supported mediation effects of job satisfaction and affective commitment on the relationship between perceived ethnic diversity and employees’ turnover intention. Gender moderated the relationships between perceived diversity and job satisfaction, affective commitment and the relationships between job satisfaction and turnover intention. This study highlights the importance of ethnic diversity impacts on employee work outcomes within Asian hospitality organizations, specifically in Taiwan.
View less >
Journal Title
Journal of Hospitality & Tourism Research
Volume
44
Issue
1
Subject
Commercial services
Human resources and industrial relations
Social Sciences
Hospitality, Leisure, Sport & Tourism
Social Sciences - Other Topics
gender
hospitality