Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/10071/28836
Author(s): Santos, S. C.
Caetano, A.
Junça Silva, A.
Editor: António Caetano
Sílvia A. Silva
Maria José Chambel
Date: 2011
Title: Employees’ satisfaction between 1996 and 2008 within the Portuguese financial sector
Book title/volume: New challenges for a healthy workplace in human services
Pages: 191 - 219
Reference: Santos, S. C., Caetano, A., & Junça Silva, A. (2011). Employees’ satisfaction between 1996 and 2008 within the Portuguese financial sector. Em A. Caetano, S. A. Silva, & M. J. Chambel (Eds.). New challenges for a healthy workplace in human services (pp. 191-220). Rainer Hampp Verlag. http://hdl.handle.net/10071/28836
ISBN: 978-3-86618-733-7
Keywords: Job satisfaction facets
Aggregated job satisfaction
Setor financeiro -- Financial sector
Abstract: This research includes two complementary studies. Study 1 intends to analyze the stability of the latent construct job satisfaction over time, through four facets - satisfaction with relationships, rewards, human resources management practices and work itself. Study 2 aims to compare the results obtained with an aggregate weighted measure of job satisfaction (Aggregated Job Satisfaction) and a single item measure (Overall Job Satisfaction). Both are cross-sectional studies with repeated measures on six time moments over a twelve years period (1996-2008) in the Portuguese financial sector organizations. Results from study 1 evidences the structural invariance of the latent construct job satisfaction and the different loading pattern on each facet, over time. Study 2 evidences that the overall job satisfaction and the aggregated job satisfaction measures displays a similar pattern of results overtime. Moreover, job satisfaction facets predicts overall job satisfaction. Theoretically, this research presents a wider view on job satisfaction issues: its facets, the debate on aggregated vs overall measures and relationships patterns over time. Moreover, satisfaction with human resources management emerges as the stronger predictor of overall job satisfaction in all the six time periods. Results suggest that managers can improve satisfaction through performance appraisal systems and training.
Peerreviewed: no
Access type: Open Access
Appears in Collections:BRU-CLI - Capítulos de livros internacionais

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