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Explaining Turnover Intention in State Government: Examining the Roles of Gender, Life Cycle, and Loyalty

Abstract (Summary)

This article tests a model of turnover intention on a large sample of Texas state employees focusing on four issues. First, the findings support a life cycle stability hypothesis, which suggests that age, experience, and geographic preferences reduce turnover intention, an effect compounded by economic/familial constraints for primary wage earners and members of large households. Second, contrary to previous research, the results show that females are significantly less likely to state an intention to quit. This finding reflects changing patterns of labor force participation, as well as the particular advantages that the public sector offers female employees. Third, the results distinguish between the relative contributions of three overlapping concepts: organizational loyalty, voice, and empowerment. Organizational loyalty and empowerment reduce turnover intention, but voice is not a significant factor. Finally, the article provides a detailed test of different personnel policies, providing particular support for diversity policies. [PUBLICATION ABSTRACT]

Indexing (document details)

Subjects:Studies,  State employees,  Employee turnover,  Female employees,  Employee empowerment,  Workplace diversity
Classification Codes9190 United States,  9130 Experiment/theoretical treatment,  9550 Public sector,  6100 Human resource planning
Locations:United States--US,  Texas
Author(s):Donald P Moynihan,  Noel Landuyt
Document types:Feature
Document features:Tables,  References
Publication title:Review of Public Personnel Administration. Columbia: Jun 2008. Vol. 28, Iss. 2;  pg. 120
Source type:Periodical
ISSN:0734371X
ProQuest document ID:1494834201
Document URL:

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