Employee voice mechanisms, leadership styles, job satisfaction and academic staff turnover intentions in universities in Kenya
Date
2021
Authors
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Chuka University
Abstract
Globally, managers are concerned about employee turnover, which has been a
major problem facing many organizations. Global average universities' academic
staff turnover intentions stand at 45%, far above10-15% considered normal by
Human Resource Management (HRM) researchers. African universities continued
to be seriously affected by brain drain, worsening the experienced high employee
turnover. In Kenya, 68% of organizations experience a high employees turnover.
Even though calls have been made towards stemming the high academic staff
turnover in universities, the situation has continued to be experienced. Employee
voice mechanisms can be considered a relevant intervention for addressing
turnover. The purpose of this study was to determine the relationship between
employee voice mechanisms and academic staff turnover intentions and the
moderating effect of leadership style and job satisfaction on this relationship. The
specific objectives were to determine the effect of employee voice mechanisms on
academic staff turnover intentions; examine the effect of leadership styles on
academic staff turnover intentions; examine the effect of employee job
satisfaction on academic staff turnover intentions; assess the moderating effect of
leadership styles on the relationship between employee voice mechanisms and
academic staff turnover intentions; assess the moderating effect of job satisfaction
on the relationship between employee voice mechanisms and academic staff
turnover intentions and finally to analyse the joint of employee voice
mechanisms, leadership style and job satisfaction on academic staff turnover
intentions. The study hypotheses were derived from the stated objectives. The
study was anchored on the Universalistic theory, Resource-based theory,
Herzberg’s two-factor theory, Kaizen theory, Harvard model of HRM, Kurt
Lewin model of leadership styles, and Unfolding model of voluntary turnover.
The study was guided by positivism research philosophy and a descriptive cross
sectional survey research design was used. The study population consisted of
17210 academic staff in Kenya universities from whom a sample of 364 was
drawn. The study adopted a multistage sampling technique. Primary data was
collected using a structured questionnaire administered through the drop and pick
later method. Descriptive statistics were used to summarize the data into means
and standard deviations. Inferential statistics employed regression analysis to test
hypotheses and draw conclusions. The data was presented using tables, charts,
and graphs. A pilot study was carried out amongst 37 respondents from Meru
University. Reliability was established by the use of Cronbachs' Alpha
coefficient. The study's findings established that employee voice mechanisms had
a significantly negative influence on academic staff turnover intentions. Secondly,
autocratic leadership style positively influences academic staff turnover intentions
while democratic and laissez-faire leadership style negatively influences turnover
intentions. Thirdly, employee job satisfaction had a significantly negative
influence on academic staff turnover. Fourthly, autocratic leadership style
moderated employee attitude surveys and academic staff turnover intentions only,
and democratic leadership style moderated the relationship between employee
representations and academic staff turnover intentions. Fifthly, supervision
moderated employee representation and academic staff turnover intentions only,
and pay and benefits moderated the relationship between employee
representations and academic staff turnover intentions. Finally, the joint effect of
employee voice mechanisms, leadership styles, and job satisfaction changed from
negative to positive. The findings of the study offer insight into the situational
positioning of employee voice mechanisms, leadership styles, and employee job
satisfaction in Kenyan universities, as well as managerial and epistemological
insights for scholars in HRM. The findings further contribute to theory, policy
development and HRM practices. The research had a few limitations. The
selection of the study variables was not exhaustive as it did not cover different
psychological traits and personalities possessed by an employee that leads to
varying job satisfaction. The use of a descriptive cross-sectional research design
and single key-informant approach and linear regression statistical models put
constraints on the generalizability of the results. Future research should address
these limitations by including additional psychological traits, personalities, soft
and hard HRM approaches using a longitudinal research design and more robust
statistical techniques such as structural equation modelling.
Description
amuguna@chuka.ac.ke
Keywords
Employee voice mechanisms, Academic staff turnover intention, Leadership styles, Job satisfaction, Employee turnover, University staff retention, Human Resource Management (HRM), Brain drain, Kenyan universities, Employee engagement, Universalistic theory, Resource-based theory, Herzberg’s two-factor theory, Kaizen theory, Harvard model of HRM, Kurt Lewin leadership model, Unfolding model of voluntary turnover, Descriptive cross-sectional survey, Positivism research philosophy, Multistage sampling, Structured questionnaire, Regression analysis, Cronbach's Alpha, Pilot study, Inferential statistics