dc.description.abstract |
One of the most prevalent organizational change strategies used around the world is
organizational downsizing. Organizational downsizing has been believed to successfully
increase organizational productivity, improve organizational competitiveness, and reduce
organizational costs. Amidst all the said positive and negative effects of organizational
downsizing, several literature and studies suggest the multitude of positive and negative
effects of organizational downsizing to the organization’s remaining employees that seem to
be related to one of the most important aspects of an employee’s organizational life:
organizational commitment.
Given this, the study aimed to determine the correlation between the survivors’ responses
to organizational downsizing and their organizational commitment in terms of the Four
Archetypes of Survivor Responses towards Organizational Downsizing by Mishra and
Spreitzer (1997) and the Three Component Model of Organizational Commitment by Allen
and Meyer (1991). In order to do so, the researcher conducted a survey in four (two private
and two government) chosen organizations in the Philippines that have implemented
downsizing. Statistics were analyzed using SPSS, and the findings revealed that each of the
survivor responses towards downsizing had different, significant relationships with the three
components of organizational commitment. Specifically, the two constructive responses
archetypes (Hopeful and Obliging) positively correlated with Affective and Normative
commitments and the two destructive responses archetypes (Fearful and Cynical) positively
correlated with Continuance and Normative commitments. |
en_US |