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. 2024 Jul;109(7):1004-1021.
doi: 10.1037/apl0001141. Epub 2023 Oct 12.

The mediating roles of supervisor anger and envy in linking subordinate performance to abusive supervision: A curvilinear examination

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The mediating roles of supervisor anger and envy in linking subordinate performance to abusive supervision: A curvilinear examination

Yolanda Na Li et al. J Appl Psychol. 2024 Jul.

Abstract

This research aims to understand why both low and high subordinate performance can induce abusive supervision. Drawing on the framework of affective events theory and research on anger and envy, we posit that low performance incurs abuse due to supervisor anger, whereas high performance elicits abuse due to supervisor envy. More specifically, subordinate performance has a decreasing curvilinear relationship with supervisor anger (i.e., a negative effect that gradually dissipates) and an increasing curvilinear relationship with supervisor envy (i.e., a positive effect that gradually emerges). Through supervisor anger and envy, subordinate performance therefore presents different curvilinear indirect relationships with abusive supervision. The results from two vignette-based experiments and a multiwave, multisource field study support these hypotheses. We further find that supervisor comparison orientation augments the curvilinear emergence of supervisor envy and ensuing abuse in response to higher subordinate performance. However, regardless of their level of performance orientation, supervisors are prone to higher anger and subsequent abusive supervision in response to lower subordinate performance. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2024 APA, all rights reserved).

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