Customer mistreatment, employee depression, and organizational citizenship behavior: Emotional intelligence as a moderator

Grounded in conservation of resources theory, this study investigated the relationship between customer mistreatment and organizational citizenship behavior by examining the mediating mechanism of depression in the workplace and the moderating role of emotional intelligence. Korean service employees...

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Published inSocial Behavior and Personality: an international journal Vol. 50; no. 3; pp. 90 - 98
Main Authors Jeong, Jeeyoon, Lee, Ji Hoon
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Palmerston North Scientific Journal Publishers 01.03.2022
Scientific Journal Publishers Ltd
Scientific Journal Publishers, Ltd
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ISSN0301-2212
1179-6391
DOI10.2224/sbp.11167

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Summary:Grounded in conservation of resources theory, this study investigated the relationship between customer mistreatment and organizational citizenship behavior by examining the mediating mechanism of depression in the workplace and the moderating role of emotional intelligence. Korean service employees ( N = 319) completed a survey at two time points spaced 3 weeks apart. We found that customer mistreatment diminished employees' organizational citizenship behavior through their sense of depression in the workplace. The results show that the positive relationship between customer mistreatment and depression in the workplace was weaker when employees had high emotional intelligence. The negative impact of customer mistreatment on organizational citizenship behavior was less pronounced for participants with high (vs. low) emotional intelligence. Theoretical and practical implications are discussed.
Bibliography:0301-2212(20220302)50:3L.90;1-
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ISSN:0301-2212
1179-6391
DOI:10.2224/sbp.11167