A social identity analysis of how pay inequality divides the workplace

Author:

Tanjitpiyanond Porntida1ORCID,Jetten Jolanda1,Peters Kim12

Affiliation:

1. The University of Queensland, Australia

2. University of Exeter, UK

Abstract

The present research examines why organizations with more unequal pay structures have been found to be characterized by a range of negative workplace outcomes. Drawing on the social identity approach, we propose that higher pay disparity can increase the comparative fit of pay categories whereby the organizational “haves” (the highest paid employees) and “have nots” (the lowest paid employees) are more likely to be categorized into distinct social groups. In turn, this can lead to poorer organizational functioning. In two studies, a field survey ( N = 413) and an experiment ( N = 286), we found that higher pay inequality increased the comparative fit of pay categories, which, in turn, was associated with lower superordinate (organizational) identification, higher perceived workplace conflict, higher leader toxicity, and lower perceptions of identity leadership (i.e., a leader who creates a sense of shared identity in the organization). Our research provides novel insights into how higher inequality affects employees’ categorization processes, thereby creating a psychological divide and contributing to organizational dysfunction.

Funder

Australian Research Council Discovery grant

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Sociology and Political Science,Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous),Communication,Cultural Studies,Social Psychology

Reference45 articles.

1. Identity Economics

2. Anderson S., Pizzigati S. (2021). Pandemic pay plunder: Low-wage workers lost hours, jobs, and lives. Their employers bent rules to pump up CEO paychecks. Institute for Policy Studies. https://ips-dc.org/report-executive-excess-2021

3. THE PERFORMANCE EFFECTS OF PAY DISPERSION ON INDIVIDUALS AND ORGANIZATIONS.

4. A Rising Tide Lifts Some Boats, but Leaves Many Others Behind: The Harms of Inequality-Induced Status Seeking and the Remedial Effects of Employee Ownership

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