An uncertainty management perspective on the antecedents of leader self‐serving behavior

Author:

Babalola Mayowa T.1ORCID,Qu Yuanmei (Elly)2ORCID,Ali Moazzam3ORCID,Pathki Chandra Shekhar Rao45ORCID,Usman Muhammad6ORCID,Muchiri Michael1

Affiliation:

1. College of Business and Law Royal Melbourne Institute of Technology Melbourne Victoria Australia

2. Rohrer College of Business Rowan University New Jersey USA

3. Department of Management Sciences COMSATS University Islamabad Lahore Campus Lahore Pakistan

4. Graduate School of Business Nazarbayev University Nur Sultan Kazakhstan

5. Rawls College of Business Texas Tech University Texas USA

6. Hertfordshire Business School University of Hertfordshire Hatfield UK

Abstract

SummaryLeader self‐serving behavior has been associated with a range of adverse outcomes in the workplace. However, much remains to be explored about why and when such leader behavior emerges in organizations. This research develops and tests a theoretical framework that delineates the emotional and cognitive states that give rise to leader self‐serving behavior. Specifically, we draw on uncertainty management theory to theorize that job insecurity heightens leaders' anxiety and self‐serving cognitions that subsequently trigger leader self‐serving behavior. We further argue that the overall justice of an organization effectively mitigates the indirect relationship between a leader's sense of job insecurity and leader self‐serving behavior via leader anxiety and self‐serving cognitions. Results from a three‐wave field study involving 481 leader–follower dyads provide support for our hypothesized model. We discuss the implications of our findings for leadership theory and practice.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Organizational Behavior and Human Resource Management,General Psychology,Sociology and Political Science,Applied Psychology

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