Psychosocial Safety Climate, Employee Satisfaction, and Organizational Commitment: The Mediating Role of Turnover Intentions among Ghanaian Bank Workers
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University of Ghana
Abstract
The banking sector in Ghana has faced significant challenges, including crises that
have not only impacted the economy and banks but also affected employees, leading
to increased turnover intentions due to reduced employee satisfaction, commitment,
job stress, and insecurity. The study explored the influence of psychosocial safety
climate, job satisfaction, and organization, with turnover intentions as a potential
mediating variable, among bank workers in Accra. A sample of 140 bank workers
from various banking institutions in Accra participated in the cross-sectional
survey. Respondents completed questionnaires measuring psychosocial safety
climate, job satisfaction, organizational commitment, and turnover intentions.
Regression analysis was conducted to test the proposed hypotheses. It was found
that a psychosocial safety climate predicted both organizational commitment and
job satisfaction. However, psychosocial safety climate did not predict turnover
intentions, and as a result, turnover intentions fail to mediate the relationship
between psychosocial safety climate and organizational commitment. The findings
were discussed in the context of the job demands-resources theory and the job
embeddedness concept, alongside related studies. In addition, the implication of
the study aims to enhance the psychosocial safety climate and reduce turnover
intentions among bank workers by establishing policies and practices that promote
mental health, well-being, and open communication among employees in the sector
as well as recommends banks in Ghana to make investments by providing a robust
psychosocial safety climate to improve organizational commitment and work
satisfaction, which in turn will lower intentions to leave.
Description
MPhil. Psychology
