Double-Edged Sword Effect of High-Performance Work System on Employee Well-Being—Moderating Effect of Union Practice

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Abstract

Improving the well-being of the employees is the inevitable choice to improve corporate performance and competitive advantage and the social responsibility that enterprises must undertake. Based on the job demands-resources model, this study introduces perceived organizational support and work stress as the mediator and trade union practice as the moderator to explore the double-edged sword effect of a high-performance work system (HPWS) on the well-being of the employee. Taking 243 employees from Jiangsu, Zhejiang, and Anhui as samples, we found that HPWS positively affects the well-being of the employee through perceived organizational support and negatively affects the well-being of the employee through work stress. Union practices can significantly reduce the positive effect of HPWS on work stress and further weaken the negative effect of HPWS on the well-being of the employee through work stress. The results of this study provide a new way to explain the impact of the HPWS on the well-being of the employees and find that union practice can weaken the negative effects of HPWS. This study provides a new thinking direction for improving the well-being of employees in enterprises.

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Qi, W., Enhua, H., Jiandong, S., & Hongmei, S. (2021). Double-Edged Sword Effect of High-Performance Work System on Employee Well-Being—Moderating Effect of Union Practice. Frontiers in Psychology, 12. https://doi.org/10.3389/fpsyg.2021.619345

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