Public employees' risk aversion and organizational citizenship behavior: The effects of ethical leadership, work culture and public service motivation

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Abstract

The purpose of this study is to analyze the influence of ethical leadership, work culture, and public service motivation on risk aversion and its impact on organizational citizenship behavior. Risk aversion is the prudence of public employees so as not to violate laws and regulations. Risk aversion variable is treated as a consequent variable of ethical leadership, work culture, and motivation based on portfolio theory. The theory sees risk aversion as a contextual behavior, rather than as an individual characteristic. Th is study was designed with a quantitative descriptive design in a sample of 130 civil servants in the Tapin District Government, South Kalimantan Province, Indonesia. The analysis was carried out by structural equation modeling. The resulting model has a GFI 0.910; CFI 1,000; and RMSEA 0,000. The study found that ethical leadership has a positive eff ect on risk aversion but does not have a significant impact on organizational citizenship behavior; work culture has a positive eff ect on risk aversion and organizational citizenship behavior; public service motivation does not affect risk aversion but has a significant eff ect on organizational citizenship behavior; and risk aversion has a positive effect on organizational citizenship behavior. This study has implications regarding the importance of the government to develop ethical leadership and a professional work culture in order to encourage the compliance of civil servants in the legislation. Th is research has a high originality value because it is the first in examining the determinants and antecedents of risk aversion in the context of public employees.

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APA

Aqli, Z., Ujianto, & Syafi’i, A. (2019). Public employees’ risk aversion and organizational citizenship behavior: The effects of ethical leadership, work culture and public service motivation. Public Administration Issues, 2019(6), 7–22. https://doi.org/10.17323/1999-5431-2019-0-6-7-22

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