Avoiding employee deviance in the hotel industry: Investigating the mediating effect of trust in leadership
Abstract
The current paper observes the effect of ethics in leadership on employees trust,
affective commitments, and deviance behaviors. Ethical behavior, choices of supervisors and managers, and apprehension of the establishments where deviant activities
are supported by workers will be vital. The impression of corrupt morals appears to
be a risk to the achievement of the institution. This study made use of a method
using a convenience sample. Statistics of 264 workers of sampled hotels were used
to obtain the opinions of the respondents about the constructs. Confirmatory factor
analysis, structural equation modeling, and correlation analysis were used to assess
the main consequences and examine the causality among associated variables. The
outcomes displayed revealed that ethical leadership can boost workers' trust in their
leaders. Thus, workers can be successfully devoted to their tasks and have no motive
to indulge in nonconformity actions when they trust in the leadership of their management. The outcomes showed that trust in leaders by staff definitely influences
affective commitments and were against unconventional deviance behaviors, as seen
from the consequences, outcomes, practical implications, and suggestions recommended, when making decisions, by future scholars.
Volume
22Issue
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