Workplace bullying, psychological distress, job performance and employee creativity: the moderating effect of psychological resilience

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Routledge Journals, Taylor & Francis Ltd

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info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess

Abstract

This study tests a model exploring the direct effect of workplace bullying on employee creativity and performance using psychological distress as the mediator and psychological resilience as the moderator based on the JD-R theory. PLS-SEM was applied to analyze data collected from both employees and supervisors of 4 - and 5-star hotels. The main findings reveal that workplace bullying affects employee creativity negatively, and psychological distress positively. While psychological distress has a negative effect on employee creativity, the latter exerts a significantly positive effect on job performance. Resilience moderates the relationships between workplace bullying and employee creativity, and psychological distress and employee creativity. This study makes a significant, original contribution to the hospitality literature as it is the first to investigate the moderator role of psychological resilience on employee creativity and performance in reaction to bullying behavior.

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Workplace bullying, psychological distress, employee creativity, job performance, resilience

Journal or Series

Service Industries Journal

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Volume

43

Issue

5-6

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