Mapping the relationships between high-performance work systems, employee resilience and engagement: a study of the banking industry in China
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Cooper, Brian
Bartram, Tim
Wang, Jue
Mei, Hexuan
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Abstract
There is now growing interest in employee resilience in the organizational context and its contribution to organizational performance. However, little is known the extent to which high-performance work systems (HPWS) contributes towards enhancing employee’s resilience as well as their levels of engagement. This study examines the relationships among HPWS, employee resilience and engagement, using a sample of 2040 employees in the Chinese banking industry. Drawing on the job demands-resources model and strategic/high-performance human resource management theory, we develop three hypotheses to test the relationship between HPWS and employee resilience, resilience and employee engagement, and the mediating effect of resilience on the relationship between HPWS and engagement. All hypotheses are supported and suggest that HPWS can be used as a job resource to positively affect resilience and subsequently employee engagement. The key message of the paper is that employee resilience can be viewed as a set of skills and attributes that can be developed through the effective use of HPWS to benefit both individuals and the organization.
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The International Journal of Human Resource Management
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30
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8
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Business and Management
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Cooke, FL; Cooper, B; Bartram, T; Wang, J; Mei, H, Mapping the relationships between high-performance work systems, employee resilience and engagement: a study of the banking industry in China, The International Journal of Human Resource Management, 2019, 30 (8), pp. 1239-1260