Aggregated personality, climate and demographic factors as predictors of departmental shrinkage


Autoria(s): Levine, SZ; Jackson, CJ
Contribuinte(s)

J W Jones

Data(s)

01/01/2002

Resumo

The present study investigated how demographic, personality, and climate variables act to predict departmental theft. Participants in the current field survey were 153 employees from 17 departments across two stores. The results of confirmatory factor analyses supported the construct validity of the Big Five Inventory (John, Donahue, & Kentle, 1991) and the Occupational Climate Questionnaire (Furnham & Gunter, 1997) in UK work settings. The results of regression analysis indicate that the variability in departmental theft is accountable in terms of a linear combination of demographic, personality, and climate factors. We concluded that an expanded theoretical perspective (utilizing demographic, personality, and climate variables) explained more variance than might otherwise be expected from any single perspective. Indeed, climate, personality, and demographic variables operated legitimately at the departmental level. Finally, we explained aggregated personality as a form of social interaction which is the by-product of individual differences.

Identificador

http://espace.library.uq.edu.au/view/UQ:63023

Idioma(s)

eng

Publicador

Kluwer Academic

Palavras-Chave #Business #Psychology, Applied #Shrinkage #Theft #Aggregated Personality #Occupational Climate #Personnel-selection #Employees Theft #Integrity Tests #Work #Performance #Honesty #Level #C1 #380108 Industrial and Organisational Psychology
Tipo

Journal Article