TY - JOUR
T1 - Linking Organizational Political Diversity with Satisfaction and Performance
T2 - The Implications of Presidential Elections
AU - Anantharaman, Anuradha
AU - Grandey, Alicia A.
AU - Min, Hanyi
AU - Surendran, Vidullan
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer Science+Business Media, LLC, part of Springer Nature 2024.
PY - 2024
Y1 - 2024
N2 - In these politically polarizing times, we suggest that political diversity (having both conservative and liberal employees) has implications for organizational culture and value satisfaction, primarily when political ingroup-outgroup identities are salient (i.e., U.S. Presidential elections). To test these organizational-level relationships over time, we obtain publicly available archival data for 15 years (four election cycles from 2008 to 2022) for Standard & Poor’s 100 U.S. organizations. During years when organizations had greater political diversity (based on employee donations to politically affiliated groups), their employees tended to report less satisfaction with the organization’s culture and values (based on Glassdoor ratings) than when organizations had less political diversity, controlling for variables like size and political leaning of the organization. Further, time-varying effect modeling (TVEM) shows stronger inflections for the effect of political diversity on dissatisfaction during the 2008, 2012, and 2016 Presidential election years, consistent with the idea that outgroup hostility becomes stronger when political identities are salient. The effect of political diversity diminished in 2020 in contrast to our predictions. However, the pattern of effects continues to follow our model and theoretical assumptions because the prevalent work-from-home requirements during the pandemic likely made political dissimilarities less salient and divisive. Overall, the costs to organizational culture and value satisfaction call for policies addressing political outgroup bias at work during election years.
AB - In these politically polarizing times, we suggest that political diversity (having both conservative and liberal employees) has implications for organizational culture and value satisfaction, primarily when political ingroup-outgroup identities are salient (i.e., U.S. Presidential elections). To test these organizational-level relationships over time, we obtain publicly available archival data for 15 years (four election cycles from 2008 to 2022) for Standard & Poor’s 100 U.S. organizations. During years when organizations had greater political diversity (based on employee donations to politically affiliated groups), their employees tended to report less satisfaction with the organization’s culture and values (based on Glassdoor ratings) than when organizations had less political diversity, controlling for variables like size and political leaning of the organization. Further, time-varying effect modeling (TVEM) shows stronger inflections for the effect of political diversity on dissatisfaction during the 2008, 2012, and 2016 Presidential election years, consistent with the idea that outgroup hostility becomes stronger when political identities are salient. The effect of political diversity diminished in 2020 in contrast to our predictions. However, the pattern of effects continues to follow our model and theoretical assumptions because the prevalent work-from-home requirements during the pandemic likely made political dissimilarities less salient and divisive. Overall, the costs to organizational culture and value satisfaction call for policies addressing political outgroup bias at work during election years.
KW - Organizational culture and value satisfaction
KW - Political diversity
KW - Presidential elections
KW - Time-varying effect model
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U2 - 10.1007/s10869-024-09941-y
DO - 10.1007/s10869-024-09941-y
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85189329547
SN - 0889-3268
JO - Journal of Business and Psychology
JF - Journal of Business and Psychology
ER -