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The effect of autonomy, training opportunities, age and salaries on job satisfaction in the South East Asian retail petroleum industry

journal contribution
posted on 2018-02-13, 00:00 authored by Peter Hosie, P Jayashree, A Tchantchane, BS Lee
South East Asian petroleum retailers are under considerable pressure to improve service quality by reducing turnover. An empirical methodology from this industry determined the extent to which job characteristics, training opportunities, age and salary influenced the level of job satisfaction, an indicator of turnover. Responses are reported on a random sample of 165 site employees (a 68% response rate) of a Singaporean retail petroleum firm. A restricted multivariate regression model of autonomy and training opportunities explained the majority (35.4%) of the variability of job satisfaction. Age did not moderate these relationships, except for employees > 21 years of age, who reported enhanced job satisfaction with additional salary. Human Capital theory, Life Cycle theory and Job Enrichment theory are invoked and explored in the context of these findings in the South East Asian retail petroleum industry. In the South East Asian retail petroleum industry, jobs providing employees with the opportunity to undertake a variety of tasks that enhanced the experienced meaningfulness of work are likely to promote job satisfaction, reduce turnover and increase the quality of service. © 2013 Taylor & Francis.

History

Volume

24

Issue

21

Start Page

3980

End Page

4007

Number of Pages

28

eISSN

1466-4399

ISSN

0958-5192

Publisher

Routledge

Peer Reviewed

  • Yes

Open Access

  • No

External Author Affiliations

Curtin University; University of Wollongong in Dubai; Mammoet Pte Ltd

Era Eligible

  • Yes

Journal

International Journal of Human Resource Management

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