Pay openness movement: Is it merited? Does it influence more desirable employee outcomes than pay secrecy?

Resource type
Authors/contributors
Title
Pay openness movement: Is it merited? Does it influence more desirable employee outcomes than pay secrecy?
Abstract
Organizations are currently moving toward increased pay openness in the workplace; thus, it is important to determine the influence pay communication practices (pay secrecy and pay openness) have on employee outcomes and whether the increase in pay openness is merited and more beneficial for organizations. The purpose of this article is to analyze pay communication’s influence on workplace deviance and organizational citizenship behaviors (OCBs). Specifically, pay secrecy practices are hypothesized to influence employees to engage in less OCBs and more workplace deviance. Informational justice and distributive justice perceptions are included as mediators. Pay secrecy leads to greater workplace deviance as well as less OCBs and justice perceptions and thus, inferring the pay openness movement is merited. A Pay Communication scale was developed and validated for this study. Practical implications, limitations, and future research directions are provided. © 2018 Eastern Academy of Management.
Publication
Organization Management Journal
Date
2018-04-03
Volume
15
Issue
2
Pages
58-77
Journal Abbr
Organization Management Journal
Citation Key
marasiPayOpennessMovement2018
Accessed
10/4/19, 8:04 PM
ISSN
1541-6518
Short Title
Pay openness movement
Language
English
Library Catalog
DOI.org (Crossref)
Extra
13 citations (Crossref) [2023-10-31] Citation Key Alias: lens.org/032-494-664-059-042, pop00257 tex.type: [object Object]
Citation
Marasi, S., Wall, A., & Bennett, R. J. (2018). Pay openness movement: Is it merited? Does it influence more desirable employee outcomes than pay secrecy? Organization Management Journal, 15(2), 58–77. https://doi.org/10.1080/15416518.2018.1471978