Psychological Contracts
INTRODUCTION
The
psychological contract offers a structure for observing employee attitudes and priorities
on those scopes that can be shown to effect performance (Chartered Institute of
Personnel and Development (CIPD), 2010). Generally measured from an employee
perspective though Guest (1998) points out that it is largely in the `eye of
the beholder'. Employers have to know what employees expect from their work and
vice-versa and it is where mutuality of either of the parties comes into
existence.
The
early methods of Argyris (1960), Levinson (1962) and Schein (1965;1978) towards
extracting the psychological contract as a form of social exchange rested upon
the need to understand the role of particular and indeterminate interactions
between two parties: employer and employee. To this end, the expectations of
both parties and the level of support and reciprocity needed to be considered jointly
in order to explain the sources of agreement and disparity (Cullinane &
Dundon,2006).
NATURE
OF PSYCHOLOGICAL CONTRACT
Psychological
contracts are an individual’s beliefs regarding reciprocal obligations. Beliefs
become contractual when the individual believes that he or she owes the
employer certain contributions (e.g. hard work, loyalty, sacrifices) in return
for certain inducements (e.g. high pay, job security) (Rousseau, 1990).
Rousseau
(1995) therefore debates that the nature of psychological contract is
subjective to perception which differs between individuals. Second, the psychological
contract is dynamic, which means it changes over time during the relationship
between the employer and employee. Third, the contract concerns mutual
obligations, based on given promises, in which both parties invest in their
relationship with the expectation of a positive outcome for them. (Anderson
& Schalk, 1998).
Despite
the fact that the psychological contract is unique and idiosyncratic in nature,
there are in general two kinds of psychological contract: transactional and
relational contracts. These contracts have been argued to differ on four
important dimensions with respect to the focus of the contract; tangibility, scope,
stability and time frame (Rousseau and McLean-Parks, 1993; McNeil, 1985;
Anderson & Schalk, 1998) to which two more dimensions were then added in
the works of Sels, Janssens & Brande (2004) exchange symmetry and contract
level.
IMPORTANCE
OF PSYCHOLOGICAL CONTRACT
Looking
into the necessity of psychological contract in organizations and institutions,
it motivates workers to fulfill commitments made to employers when workers are
confident that employers will give in return and fulfill their end of the
bargain. Employers in turn have their own psychological contracts with workers,
depending upon their individual competence, trustworthiness and importance to
the firm’s mission (Rousseau, 2004).
In
general employees claimed that they felt less secure in their jobs compared to
a few
years
ago. The reasons they gave were primarily associated with the declining levels
of
demand
and the consequent reduction in production levels (Martin; Staines; &
Plate, 1998). It is important in determining the continuation of the
psychological contract is the extent to which the beliefs, values, expectations
and aspirations are perceived to be met or violated and the extent of trust
that exists within the relationship (Middlemiss, 2011).
DEFINITION
`The
perceptions of both parties to the employment relationship, organization and
individual, of the obligations implied in the relationship. Psychological
contracting is the process whereby these perceptions are arrived at' (Herriot
and Pemberton, 1995). Despite the interest and wealth of literatures pertaining
to the psychological contract, there remains no one or accepted universal
definition (Anderson and Schalk, 1998).
Team
members can provide inputs and carry out job responsibilities with very high
commitment and Loyalty to the organization and in return will expect additional
rewards appreciations and promotions. But from the organization point of view
it could be serving the job responsibilities based on the Job Description provided
to the employee. Hence will not provide anything else except the salary. This
might lead employees to be demotivated and leave the company within a short
period. For example, in my first employment where I worked for 5 years, it was
promised, if the role was managed well certain other opportunities will be
given. Based on this psychological contract I personally gave my fullest
commitment to grow the category I was assigned to, as the best among all
competitors. But the psychological contract was broken, when the company did not
keep their end of the bargain and I had no choice but to hand in my resignation.
Today single handedly I handle the largest high grown Tea catalogue in the
country, where my new employer kept their end of the bargain and I held towards
mine, which has benefitted both parties for the last 13 years.
Rousseau’s
development in the field of psychological contract plays a defined role, the
latest development made in 1995, in her book, defines psychological contract
as, “individual’s beliefs, shaped by the organization, regarding terms of an
exchange agreement between the individual and their organization”. Beliefs here
are the promises, obligations and expectations of the parties to the contract
(Conway, 2005).
Table
1.0: Understanding Psychological Contracts at Work
Belief
|
Definition
|
Examples
|
Promise
|
1.‘a
commitment to do (or not to do) something’ (Rousseau and Parks, 1993)
2.
‘an assurance that one will or will not undertake a certain action, or
behaviour’ (Concise Oxford Dictionary 1996)
|
“I
will get the reward
because
that was the
deal”
|
Obligation
|
1.
‘a feeling of inner compulsion from whatever source, to act in a certain way
towards another, or towards the community; in a narrower sense a feeling
arising from beliefs received, prompting to service in return; less definite
than duty, and not
involving,
the ability to act in accordance with it’. (Drever, Dictionary of psychology,
1958)
2.
‘the constraining power of a law, percept, duty, contract, etc.’(Concise
Oxford Dictionary,1996)
|
“I
should get the
reward
because I
worked
hard”
|
Expectation
|
1.
‘expectations take many forms from beliefs in the probability of future
events to normative beliefs’. (Rousseau and Parks, 1993)
2.
‘the attitude of waiting attentively for something usually to a certain
extent, defined, however vaguely’(Drever, Dictionary of psychology,1958)
3.
‘the act or instance of expecting of looking forward; the probability of an
event’(Concise Oxford Dictionary,1996).
|
“I
am likely to get
the
reward as that’s
happened
occasionally
in the
past”
|
(Source: Conway & Briner, 2005)
TYPES
OF PSYCHOLOGICAL CONTRACT
Transactional
Transactional
contract are short term contracts that last only until the agreed period of
contract. It is the place where they seek immediate rewards out of the
employment situation, such as pay and credentials (Millward & Hopkins,
1998). Miles and Snow (1980) cited in their study that transactional contracts
involve specific monetizable exchanges (e.g. pay for attendance) between
parties over a specific time period as in the case of temporary employment or
recruitment by ‘buy’-oriented firms (Rousseau, 1990).
Relational/Traditional
Relational
contract establishes and maintains a relationship involving both monetizable
and non- monetizable exchanges (e.g. hard work, loyalty and security)
(Rousseau, 1990). According to the works of Blau (1964), mentioned in Millward
& Hopkins, (1998) a transactional obligation is linked with economic
exchange, while relational obligations are linked with social exchange. Unlike
economic exchange, social exchange “involves unspecified obligations, the
fulfillment of which depends on trust because it cannot be enforced in the
absence of a binding contract. Rousseau (1990); Rousseau and McLean Parks
(1993) in their works have argued that transactional and relational contracts
are best regarded as the extreme opposite of a single continuum underlying
contractual arrangements. In other words, the more relational the contract
becomes the less transactional and vice versa (Conway & Briner, 2005).
It is
broader, more amorphous, open ended and subjectively understood by the parties
to the exchange. They are concerned with the exchange of personal,
socioemotional, and value based, as well as economic resources (Conway &
Briner, 2005) and they exist over a period of time.
The
traditional psychological contract is generally described as an offer of
commitment by the employee in return for the employer providing job security ‐ or in some cases the
legendary 'job for life'(Cullinane & Dundon, 2006).
Rousseau
(1995) has made the distinction between transactional and relational types of
contracts
as below-
Table
2.0: A Continuum of Contract Terms
Transactional
|
Relational
|
|
Economic
|
--------Focus---------
|
Economic,
Emotional
|
Partial
|
-------Inclusion-------
|
Whole
person
|
Closed
ended specific
|
-------Time
frame----
|
Open
ended, indefinite
|
Written
|
---Formalization----
|
Written,
Unwritten
|
Static
|
-------Stability-------
|
Dynamic
|
Narrow
|
---------Scope---------
|
Pervasive
|
Public,
Observable
|
-----Tangibility------
|
Subjective,
understood
|
(Source: Rousseau, 1995)
Transitional
Contract
Transitional
contract, as the name suggests, is a passing phase of relationship between the
two parties reflecting the absence of commitments regarding future employment
(Aggarwal, & Bhargava, 2009). They are not a psychological contract form
itself, but a cognitive statement, reflecting the consequences of
organizational change and transitions that are at odds with a previously
established employment arrangement (Rousseau, 2000).
Balanced
Contract
Balanced
contracts combine commitments on the part of the employer to develop workers (both
in the firm or elsewhere if need be), while anticipating that workers will be
flexible and willing to adjust if economic conditions change and such contracts
anticipate renegotiation over time as economic conditions and worker needs
change. Balanced contracts entail shared risk between worker and employer.
(Rousseau, 2004).
EMPLOYMENT
CONTRACT AND PSYCHOLOGICAL CONTRACT
Levinson
(1966), in his work as cited in Spriggs, 1996 mentions expectations in legal
contracts
are specified, explicit and defined, while expectations associated with the
psychological
contract is unspoken, implicit and imprecise. Even when a legal contract
exists,
it is a written obligation that can never be complete and must be supplemented
by unwritten promises.
BREACH
AND VIOLATION OF PSYCHOLOGICAL CONTRACT
Breach
is a non-fulfillment of the promise, that is when one or both parties fail to
meet the obligations of the other. Reactions to a broken contract can be severe
and ultimately cause detrimental workplace outcomes. Breaches can lead to
violation, the emotional response. These often encompass negative emotional
states like anger, disappointment or betrayal and can lead to worsened job
performance, withdrawal and leaving the organization (“The Psychological
Contract,” n.d., “Breach and Violation,”para. 1).
Perceptions
of breach arise from a complex and sometimes imperfect sense making process
when perceived breach refers to the cognition that one’s organization has
failed to meet one or more obligations within one’s psychological contract in a
manner commensurate with one’s contribution (Robinson, 1996; Atkinson, 2006;
Morrison & Robinson, 1997).
ANTECEDENTS
OF BREACH
Conway
(2005) has brought out the following reasons that cause breach; Firstly,
inadequate provision of human resource management practices where employees are
more likely to report psychological contract fulfillment if they notice that
their organization adopts human resource management practices; Secondly, the cause of breach when employees feel
unsupported by either their organization or their supervisors; The third type
of cause of employee breach is events happening outside the organization or
before the employee became a member of the organization.
Robinson
and Morrison, (2000) has found that employees are more likely to perceive
breach by their current employer where, first, they have experienced breach by
former employers and, second, where employees perceive themselves to have many
employment alternatives and finally, a breach can be caused when employees
compare their deals unfavorably with other employees and perceive inequity
(Conway & Briner, 2005).
CONSEQUENCES
OF BREACH
If an
employee believes that the employer has breached agreed terms under the
contract, his reaction depending on the perceived seriousness of the breach
will range from acceptance, mild complaint, withdrawal of effort or goodwill
and the last resort, handing in his notice. Where employees hold strong beliefs
in their entitlements under the psychological contract and they discover that
what had been promised to them by their employer will not be forthcoming they
can feel cheated or violated or that they have wasted their time working for them
(Middlemiss, 2011).
VIOLATION
OF CONTRACT
Psychological
contract violation according to Dean et al., (1998) & Pate et al., (2000)
as cited by Pate; Martin & McGoldrick, (2003) may lead individuals to
become more cynical. Employee cynicism has been defined as a negative attitude
and involves a belief that their organization lacks integrity, negative
emotions towards the organization and a tendency for employees towards critical
behaviour of their organization. The targets of such cynicism are usually
senior executives, the organization in general and corporate policies.
CONCLUSION
Psychological
contract forms the actions of the parties and also aids the organization to
effectively manage their employee sand turns out to be beneficial for both the
employers and the employees. For a psychological contract to be contented, and determining
energetic and effective employees, the message of expectations between either
of the parties plays a significant role.
Employer
and employee will have to create good intentions, confidence and feelings of
attachment
in the minds of each other which will in return strengthen their bond and also
guidance
on how they intend to perform and counter their support towards each other.
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