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Organisational justice and workplace social support as predictors of employee wellbeing: A case of high-income workers in South Africa

Amongst the 17 Sustainable Development Goals as proposed by the United Nations, the study was concerned with promoting decent work (Sustainable Development Goal 8) and wellbeing (Sustainable Development Goal 3) amongst high-income workers. In line with what constitutes decent work, the study aimed t...

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Main Author: Viljoen, Lana
Other Authors: Meyer, Ines
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Organisational Psychology 2023
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access_status_str Open Access
author Viljoen, Lana
author2 Meyer, Ines
author_browse Meyer, Ines
Viljoen, Lana
author_facet Meyer, Ines
Viljoen, Lana
author_sort Viljoen, Lana
collection Thesis
description Amongst the 17 Sustainable Development Goals as proposed by the United Nations, the study was concerned with promoting decent work (Sustainable Development Goal 8) and wellbeing (Sustainable Development Goal 3) amongst high-income workers. In line with what constitutes decent work, the study aimed to determine to what extent organisational justice (comprising distributive, procedural, interpersonal, and informational justice) and workplace social support (comprising perceived organisational support, perceived supervisory support, and perceived co-worker support) predicted employee wellbeing amongst high-income workers. The results provided insight into the multidimensionality of wellbeing and revealed two types of wellbeing present in the study, namely work-related wellbeing and interpersonal wellbeing. The study adopted a correlational research design, assisted by survey research, where an online survey was distributed via LinkedIn and WhatsApp to collect data from high-income workers (N = 120). The regression results indicated that all types of organisational justice and workplace social support predicted the two types of wellbeing. In addition, mediation analyses indicated that supervisory support strengthened the relationship between interactional justice (i.e., interpersonal and informational justice) and employee wellbeing (i.e., work-related and interpersonal wellbeing). The study thus highlighted the importance of supervisory support in achieving interpersonal and informational justice and proposed training aimed at interpersonal skills for supervisors to aid in the management of employee wellbeing. In addition, the study highlighted how COVID-19 had disintegrated the workplace as many organisations required their employees to work remotely. The study thus proposed that organisations should seek ways for employees to interact with one another in a virtual working environment. Therefore, as organisations maintain decent working conditions by implementing fairness and support in the workplace, they contribute to the management of employee wellbeing.
format Thesis
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institution University of Cape Town (South Africa)
language eng
last_indexed 2026-06-10T12:31:58.458Z
license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2023
publishDateRange 2023
publishDateSort 2023
publisher Organisational Psychology
publisherStr Organisational Psychology
record_format dspace
source_str UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/37030 Organisational justice and workplace social support as predictors of employee wellbeing: A case of high-income workers in South Africa Viljoen, Lana Meyer, Ines Employee wellbeing Organisational justice Workplace social support Workrelated wellbeing Interpersonal wellbeing Distributive justice Procedural justice Interpersonal justice Informational justice Perceived organisational support Perceived supervisory support Perceived co-worker support Amongst the 17 Sustainable Development Goals as proposed by the United Nations, the study was concerned with promoting decent work (Sustainable Development Goal 8) and wellbeing (Sustainable Development Goal 3) amongst high-income workers. In line with what constitutes decent work, the study aimed to determine to what extent organisational justice (comprising distributive, procedural, interpersonal, and informational justice) and workplace social support (comprising perceived organisational support, perceived supervisory support, and perceived co-worker support) predicted employee wellbeing amongst high-income workers. The results provided insight into the multidimensionality of wellbeing and revealed two types of wellbeing present in the study, namely work-related wellbeing and interpersonal wellbeing. The study adopted a correlational research design, assisted by survey research, where an online survey was distributed via LinkedIn and WhatsApp to collect data from high-income workers (N = 120). The regression results indicated that all types of organisational justice and workplace social support predicted the two types of wellbeing. In addition, mediation analyses indicated that supervisory support strengthened the relationship between interactional justice (i.e., interpersonal and informational justice) and employee wellbeing (i.e., work-related and interpersonal wellbeing). The study thus highlighted the importance of supervisory support in achieving interpersonal and informational justice and proposed training aimed at interpersonal skills for supervisors to aid in the management of employee wellbeing. In addition, the study highlighted how COVID-19 had disintegrated the workplace as many organisations required their employees to work remotely. The study thus proposed that organisations should seek ways for employees to interact with one another in a virtual working environment. Therefore, as organisations maintain decent working conditions by implementing fairness and support in the workplace, they contribute to the management of employee wellbeing. 2023-02-23T11:14:49Z 2023-02-23T11:14:49Z 2022 2023-02-21T07:28:10Z Master Thesis Masters MCom http://hdl.handle.net/11427/37030 eng application/pdf Organisational Psychology Faculty of Commerce
spellingShingle Employee wellbeing
Organisational justice
Workplace social support
Workrelated wellbeing
Interpersonal wellbeing
Distributive justice
Procedural justice
Interpersonal justice
Informational justice
Perceived organisational support
Perceived supervisory support
Perceived co-worker support
Viljoen, Lana
Organisational justice and workplace social support as predictors of employee wellbeing: A case of high-income workers in South Africa
thesis_degree_str Master's
title Organisational justice and workplace social support as predictors of employee wellbeing: A case of high-income workers in South Africa
title_full Organisational justice and workplace social support as predictors of employee wellbeing: A case of high-income workers in South Africa
title_fullStr Organisational justice and workplace social support as predictors of employee wellbeing: A case of high-income workers in South Africa
title_full_unstemmed Organisational justice and workplace social support as predictors of employee wellbeing: A case of high-income workers in South Africa
title_short Organisational justice and workplace social support as predictors of employee wellbeing: A case of high-income workers in South Africa
title_sort organisational justice and workplace social support as predictors of employee wellbeing a case of high income workers in south africa
topic Employee wellbeing
Organisational justice
Workplace social support
Workrelated wellbeing
Interpersonal wellbeing
Distributive justice
Procedural justice
Interpersonal justice
Informational justice
Perceived organisational support
Perceived supervisory support
Perceived co-worker support
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/37030
work_keys_str_mv AT viljoenlana organisationaljusticeandworkplacesocialsupportaspredictorsofemployeewellbeingacaseofhighincomeworkersinsouthafrica