
Job Resources and Organizational Commitment in Finnish Company Units in Finland and Russia
Author(s) -
Тиина Саари,
Харри Мелин
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
mir rossii
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.464
H-Index - 6
eISSN - 1811-0398
pISSN - 1811-038X
DOI - 10.17323/1811-038x-2021-30-2-48-71
Subject(s) - organizational commitment , salary , business , job satisfaction , affective events theory , affect (linguistics) , work (physics) , order (exchange) , psychology , business administration , public relations , marketing , job performance , political science , social psychology , job attitude , engineering , mechanical engineering , communication , finance , law
This article compares organizational commitment and its predictors in the units of two Finnish companies operating in Finland and Russia. The research questions are: which of the two countries has a higher level of organizational commitment and do different job resources affect the organizational commitment of Finnish and Russian employees? The research data was collected in a web survey (N=636). Cross tabulation, variance analysis and binary logistic regression analysis were used as the analysis methods. Russian employees were more committed in both organizations compared with their Finnish counterparts. Based on the regression analysis, development opportunities and the support of colleagues influenced the organizational commitment of both Finnish and Russian employees. Opportunities for influencing one’s work also affected commitment among Finns. By contrast, satisfaction with management or salary had no statistically significant effect on organizational commitment in either of the countries. Both in Finland and in Russia organizations must invest in employee well-being, especially development possibilities and supportive work communities in order to enhance affective organizational commitment. This study adds to the limited comparative research on Finland and Russia and the predictors of affective organizational commitment in these countries.