A closer look at the effects of subordinate–supervisor age differences

EL Perry, CT Kulik, J Zhou - Journal of Organizational Behavior …, 1999 - Wiley Online Library
Journal of Organizational Behavior: The International Journal of …, 1999Wiley Online Library
Relational demography research has emphasized a similarity–attraction paradigm in
explaining employees' reactions to demographic differences from other organizational
members. This study examined similarity–attraction (nondirectional age differences) and
status incongruence (directional age differences) predictions of age difference effects. The
nondirectional and directional differences between the age of a subordinate and the ages of
his or her immediate and higher‐level supervisors were used to predict employee …
Abstract
Relational demography research has emphasized a similarity–attraction paradigm in explaining employees' reactions to demographic differences from other organizational members. This study examined similarity–attraction (nondirectional age differences) and status incongruence (directional age differences) predictions of age difference effects. The nondirectional and directional differences between the age of a subordinate and the ages of his or her immediate and higher‐level supervisors were used to predict employee absenteeism, citizenship, and work change behaviors. Results revealed that there were more significant and marginally significant directional age difference effects than nondirectional age difference effects on work outcomes. The implications of these results for organizations are discussed. Copyright © 1999 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.
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