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The effect of negative work outcomes and values on the perceived likelihood of employee dishonest behaviour

Krista Jaakson (Faculty of Business Administration, Ton Duc Thang University, Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam)
Maaja Vadi (School of Economics and Business Administration, University of Tartu, Tartu, Estonia)
Ilona Baumane-Vītoliņa (Faculty of Economics and Management, University of Latvia, Riga, Latvia)

Baltic Journal of Management

ISSN: 1746-5265

Article publication date: 7 September 2018

Issue publication date: 13 September 2018

1096

Abstract

Purpose

Employee dishonesty is problematic for businesses in general, particularly for retailers. The purpose of this paper is to empirically analyse selected factors associated with the perceived likelihood of dishonest behaviour among retail employees. Specifically, the role of three negative work outcomes – insufficient pay, boredom, and perceived injustice – is investigated, as well as the effect of individual values and espoused organisational values.

Design/methodology/approach

The sample consisted of 784 retail employees from six retail organisations located in Estonia and Latvia. A survey questionnaire that used manipulated scenarios of work outcomes and organisational values was administered.

Findings

The study concludes that perceived injustice produces more dishonesty than other negative work outcomes (insufficient pay and boredom), whereas boredom was a surprisingly strong trigger for the perceived likelihood of dishonest behaviour. Individual ethical values determined the perceived likelihood of dishonest behaviour as hypothesised while sensation-seeking values did not. Espoused organisational values had no significant effect on the perceived likelihood of dishonest behaviour.

Practical implications

The results imply that the breach of distributional and procedural justice simultaneously associates most with employee dishonesty, and retail employee selection is the key to curbing dishonest behaviour in the workplace.

Originality/value

The paper makes a contribution to behavioural ethics literature by studying dishonest employee behaviour in the post-communist context while addressing various forms of dishonest behaviour, in addition to stealing. Also, the effect of espoused organisational values has been scarcely studied before.

Keywords

Acknowledgements

The authors are grateful to Ruta Kazlauskaite, Mark F. Peterson, Ingo Zettler, and two anonymous reviewers for their comments and suggestions that greatly helped to improve the paper. This study was partly supported by Project IUT20-49 Structural Change as the Factor of Productivity Growth in the Case of Catching up Economies.

Citation

Jaakson, K., Vadi, M. and Baumane-Vītoliņa, I. (2018), "The effect of negative work outcomes and values on the perceived likelihood of employee dishonest behaviour", Baltic Journal of Management, Vol. 13 No. 4, pp. 605-622. https://doi.org/10.1108/BJM-03-2018-0091

Publisher

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Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2018, Emerald Publishing Limited

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