4.6 Article

It's Not Only What You Do, But Why You Do It: How Managerial Motives Influence Employees' Fairness Judgments

Journal

JOURNAL OF APPLIED PSYCHOLOGY
Volume 107, Issue 4, Pages 581-603

Publisher

AMER PSYCHOLOGICAL ASSOC
DOI: 10.1037/ap10000898

Keywords

fairness judgments; justice rule adherence; justice motives; attributed motives; prosocial and self-interest

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This research shows that employees consider not only the extent to which supervisors adhere to justice, but also the motives behind their actions when forming fairness judgments. The study outlines three distinct theoretical pathways to fairness, indicating that supervisory justice motives affect fairness judgments through a behavioral pathway and an attributional pathway. Organizations should be cautious about inadvertently instilling a self-interest justice motive in their supervisors in order to promote fairness.
Although past research demonstrates that perceived fairness leads to many benefits, it also tends to assume that fairness flows almost exclusively from justice adherence. We instead reason that when employees form fairness judgments, they consider not only the extent to which supervisors adhere to justice but also why supervisors do so. In particular, our work outlines three distinct theoretical pathways to fairness. Supervisory justice motives affect fairness judgments via supervisors' justice rule adherence (behavioral) and via employees' attributed motives (attributional), such that prosocial (self-interest) motives are positively (negatively) related to fairness judgments after controlling for justice. We also reason that people jointly consider supervisory motives and justice when forming fairness judgments (interactive), such that the relationship between prosocial (self-interest) motives and fairness judgments is more positive (negative) when justice is lower versus higher. We test our predictions across six studies, both survey and experimental. Our results support the three pathways for prosocial justice motives and the behavioral and attributional (but not interactive) pathways for self-interest justice motives. Our work suggests organizations trying to promote fairness should avoid inadvertently instilling a self-interest justice motive in their supervisors.

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