• Title of article

    Direct and Indirect Influence of HRM Practices on Employee Performance and Turnover Intention

  • Author/Authors

    DEVIRAJARATNAM, SUSHILA Cooperative College of Malaysia - Research and Consultancy Centre, Malaysia

  • From page
    27
  • To page
    47
  • Abstract
    This study attempted to narrow the dearth in the literature with regard to the influence of human resource management (HRM) practices on employees. The study, using a sample of clerical front liners in service-based cooperatives in West Malaysia revealed that HRM practices (training and development, performance appraisal, communication and participation, and rewards) had a significant direct positive and indirect positive relationship with employee performance. The indirect relationship was mediated by affective organisational commitment. In contrast, HRM practices only had an indirect relationship with turnover intention, mediated by affective organisational commitment. Affective supervisory commitment did not mediate the relationship between HRM practices and employee performance nor the relationship between HRM practices and turnover intention. The results suggested that HRM practices can enhance employee performance directly as well as indirectly, through fostering affective organisational commitment. In addition, HRM practices can reduce turnover intention only indirectly through enhancing affective organisational commitment.
  • Keywords
    Keywords: Human resource management , employee outcomes , employee commitment , employee performance , turnover intention , organisational commitment.
  • Journal title
    Malaysian Management Journal
  • Journal title
    Malaysian Management Journal
  • Record number

    2680449