Frontiers in Psychology (Aug 2022)

Under the humble mask: Investigating when and how leader-expressed humility leads to employee voice

  • Wen-Qian Zou,
  • Wen-Qian Zou,
  • Shu-Chen Chen

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fpsyg.2022.950059
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13

Abstract

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This study aimed to explore the psychological mechanisms through which psychological safety and self-efficacy mediate the relationship between leader-expressed humility and employee voice. Moreover, attribution theory was applied to examine the possible detrimental effects of leader-expressed humility when employees perceive manipulative intentions in their humble leader. The current study proposed the leader’s manipulative intention as a moderator to weaken the indirect relationships between leader-expressed humility and employee voice through psychological safety and self-efficacy. Time-lagged supervisor–subordinate matched data were used to test the model. Our findings reveal leader’s manipulative intention weakens the positive effect that leader-expressed humility impacts on employee voice through psychological safety and self-efficacy. The implications of the findings were discussed from both theoretical and practical perspectives.

Keywords