4.2 Article Proceedings Paper

Unrewarding work, coworker support, and job satisfaction - A test of the buffering hypothesis

Journal

WORK AND OCCUPATIONS
Volume 27, Issue 2, Pages 223-243

Publisher

SAGE PUBLICATIONS INC
DOI: 10.1177/0730888400027002005

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Beneficial effects of social support ill the workplace have received only limited attention from sociologists. Workgroup interactions, especially social support received from coworkers, may significantly contribute to job satisfaction. This article assesses the effects of coworker support on job satisfaction, paying particular attention to the nature and influence of instrumental coworker support both relative to and in conjunction with affective coworker support. The authors expect that both affective and instrumental social support will exert significant and independent effects on these outcomes and that instrumental support will buffer the effects of nonrewarding work on job satisfaction. These hypotheses are rested in a series of ordinary least squares regression models. Data are drawn from a nationally representative sample of 2,505 full-time employees. Study findings are consistent with a main effects model of workplace social support. Suggestions for the absence of buffering effects, implications for industrial policy, and future research efforts are offered.

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