The impact of organizational justice on hotel employees’ social loafing behavior: The moderating role of organizational ethical culture
-
Received January 10, 2026;Accepted March 17, 2026;Published April 3, 2026
- Author(s)
-
DOIhttp://dx.doi.org/10.21511/ppm.24(2).2026.01
-
Article InfoVolume 24 2026, Issue #2, pp. 1-11
- TO CITE АНОТАЦІЯ
- 13 Views
-
2 Downloads
This work is licensed under a
Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License
Type of the article: Research Article
Abstract
Organizational justice, a critical aspect of organizational behavior, significantly influences employees’ behavior, including job satisfaction and job performance. This study investigates the impact of organizational justice (specifically procedural, distributive, and interactional justice) on social loafing, with the moderating effect of organizational ethical culture on the relationship between organizational justice and social loafing. To achieve the study’s objectives, a quantitative research method utilizing a structured questionnaire was employed to test the proposed hypotheses. Of the 750 questionnaires distributed to employees of five-star hotels in Amman City, Jordan, 527 were returned, yielding a 70% response rate. As predicted, the results of the main hypothesis (β = 0.827, t = 26.21, p < 0.01) indicate that organizational justice has a statistically significant impact on reducing social loafing. The three dimensions of organizational justice also showed significant impact in reducing social loafing: procedural justice (β = 0.315, t = 4.371, p < 0.000), distributive justice (β = 0.321, t = 5.751, p < 0.000), and interactional justice (β = 0.268, t = 5.426, p < 0.000). Regarding the moderating effect, the hierarchical multiple regression analysis demonstrates that organizational ethical culture moderates the relationship between organizational justice and social loafing behavior. These results confirm that organizational justice is critical to enhancing employees’ self-efficacy; more specifically, procedural justice, which encompasses the processes and methods used in decision-making, conflict resolution, and resource allocation, is of paramount importance.
- Keywords
-
JEL Classification (Paper profile tab)M12, M14, L21
-
References39
-
Tables7
-
Figures1
-
- Figure 1. Research model
-
- Table 1. Reliability coefficients
- Table 2. Respondents’ demographic profile
- Table 3. Correlation matrix of variables
- Table 4. Variance inflation factor and tolerance
- Table 5. Regression analysis to test the impact of organizational justice on social loafing
- Table 6. Statistical test for sub-hypotheses
- Table 7. Hierarchical multiple regression analysis results
-
- Awee, A., Gopalan, R., Farhana, H., Maludin, N., & Tazilah, M. (2024). Effects of organizational justice on social loafing: The mediating role of felt obligation. Journal of Entrepreneurship and Business, 12(1), 43-64.
- Al Shibly, S., & Bakir, S. (2023). The impact of organizational justice on organizational trust: Examining the moderating role of job security: A study at the Jordanian insurance companies. In B. Alareeni, A. Hamdan, R. Khamis, & R.E. Khoury (Eds.), Digitalisation: Opportunities and Challenges for Business (Vol. 621, pp. 3-13). Cham: Springer.
- Alam, K., Ali, A., & Subhan, F. (2015). Evaluation method, task outcomes and group structure as counteracting strategies of social loafing in manufacturing industries of Pakistan. Business Review, 10(1), 131-146.
- Ardichvili, A., Jondle, D., Kowske, B., Cornachione, E., Li, J., & Thakadipuram, T. (2012). Ethical cultures in large business organizations in Brazil, Russia, India, and China. Journal of Business Ethics, 105(4), 415-428.
- Alghamdi, A., Baquero, A., Khairy, H.A. & Salama, W.M.E. (2024). Social loafing and job performance in hotels: Does transactional leadership matter? African Journal of Hospitality, Tourism and Leisure, 13(1), 192-197.
- Bettencourt, A., Brown, W., & MacKenzie, B. (2005). Customer-oriented boundary-spanning behaviors: Test of a social exchange model of antecedents. Journal of Retailing, 81(2), 141-157.
- Charbonneau, D., Sasaki, T., & Dornhaus, A. (2017). Who needs lazy workers? Inactive workers act as a `reserve’ labor force replacing active workers, but inactive workers are not replaced when they are removed. PLOS ONE, 12(9).
- Cropanzano, R., Bowen, E., & Gilliland, W. (2007). The management of organizational justice. Academy of Management Perspectives, 21(4), 34-48.
- Chen, C., Wang, B., An, H., & Min, L. (2024). Organizational justice perception and employees’ social loafing in the context of the COVID-19 epidemic: The mediating role of organizational commitment. Humanities and Social Sciences Communications, 11, Article 176.
- Colquitt, A., Conlon, E., Wesson, J., Porter, H., & Ng, Y. (2001). Justice at the millennium: A meta-analytic review of 25 years of organizational justice research. Journal of Applied Psychology, 86(3), 425-445.
- Colquitt, A., Scott, B.A., Judge, T.A., & Shaw, J.C. (2006). Justice and personality: Using integrative theories to derive moderators of justice effects. Organizational Behavior and Human Decision Processes, 100, 110-27.
- DeVaro, J. (2016). The efficacy of internal or external hiring hinges on other policies that a firm uses simultaneously, internal hiring or external recruitment? IZA World of Labor, 2016, Article 237.
- Daryono, D., & Foertsch, C. (2023). The role of active social loafing and psychological encouragement in human capital development. Jurnal Manajemen Bisnis, 14(1), 143-161.
- Etemadi, M., Darab, M. G., Khorasani, E., Moradi, F., & Vazirinasab, H. (2015). Social loafing among nurses and its relation with organizational justice. International Journal of Educational and Psychological Researches, 1(2), 125-130.
- Elshaer, A., Algezawy, M., Ghaleb, S., Mohamed, A., & Azazz, A. (2023). The impact of social loafing on turnover intention for tourism employees post COVID-19: The mediating role of mental health. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 20, Article 5702.
- Edrees, E., Sobaih, E., Gharbi, H., & Abu Elnasr, E. (2023). The influences of procedural justice on turnover intention and social loafing behavior among hotel employees. Journal of Risk and Financial Management, 16(2).
- George, M. (1992). Extrinsic and intrinsic origins of perceived social loafing in organizations. The Academy of Management Journal, 35(1), 191 202.
- Hasegawa, E., Ishii, Y., Tada, K., Kobayashi, K., & Yoshimura, J. (2016). Lazy workers are necessary for long-term sustainability in insect societies. Scientific Reports, 6, Article 20846.
- Hyusein, A., & Eyupoglu, S. (2023). Ethical leadership and perceived organizational politics: The mediating role of social loafing. International Journal of Organizational Leadership, 12(2), 125-143.
- Huhtala, M., Tolvanen, A., Mauno, S., & Feldt, T. (2015). The associations between ethical organizational culture, burnout, and engagement: A multilevel study. Journal of Business and Psychology, 30(2), 399-414.
- Himmetoğlu, B., Ayduğ, D., & Bayrak, C. (2022). Relationships among teachers’ perceptions on coworker social loafing, organizational justice, and task visibility. International Journal of Educational Management, 36(3), 247-260.
- Hijazin, A. F. (2020). Servant leadership and its impact in reducing social loafing: Test of the moderating role of organizational happiness: A field study on the private hospitals in Amman (Unpublished MBA Thesis). Middle East University. (In Arabic).
- Kravitz, D., & Martin, B. (1986). Ringelmann rediscovered: The original article. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 50(5), 936-941.
- Kaptein, M. (2009). Ethics programs and ethical culture: A next step in unraveling their multi-faceted relationship. Journal of Business Ethics, 89(2), 261-281.
- Karatepe, M. (2006). Customer complaints and organizational responses: The effects of complainants’ perceptions of justice on satisfaction and loyalty. International Journal of Hospitality Management, 25(1), 69-90.
- Karau, S., & Williams, K. (1993). Social loafing: A meta-analytical and theoretical integration. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 64(4) 681-706.
- Kumari, G., & Pandey, M. (2011). Analysis of an individual’s behavior in work environment for a better output. International Journal of Innovation, Management and Technology, 2(2). 156-161.
- Lin, T. C., & Huang, C. C. (2009). Understanding social loafing in knowledge contribution from the perspectives of justice and trust. Expert Systems with Applications, 36(3), 6156-6163.
- Liden, C., Wayne, J., Jaworski, A., & Bennett, N. (2004). Social loafing: A field investigation. Journal of Management, 30(2), 285-304.
- Lakshitha, M., & Priyankara, H. (2025). Navigating social loafing: a qualitative inquiry on active team members’ coping strategies at the Faculty of Management Studies, Sabaragamuwa University of Sri Lanka. In Seventh Management Undergraduates’ Research Session (MURS 2025), 263-266.
- Muala, I., Al-Ghalabi, R., Alsheikh, A., Hamdan, B., & Alnawafleh, T. (2022). Evaluating the effect of organizational justice on turnover intention in the public hospitals of Jordan: Mediated-moderated model of employee silence, workplace bullying, and work stress. International Journal of Professional Business Review, 7(3), Article e526.
- Meyers, C. (2004). Institutional culture and individual behavior: Creating an ethical environment. Science and Engineering Ethics, 10(2), 269-276.
- Mert, I., Sen, C., & Alzghoul, A. (2022). Organizational justice, life satisfaction, and happiness: The mediating role of workplace social courage. Kybernetes, 51(7), 2215-2232.
- Ringelmann, M. (1913). Research on animate sources of power: The work of man. Annales de l’Instuit National Agronomique, 12, 1-40.
- Sekaran, U., & Bougie, R. (2016). Research methods for business: A skill-building approach 7th ed.). West Sussex: Wiley & Sons.
- Thanh, B., & Van Toan, N. (2018). The relationship between organizational justice and social loafing in Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam. The Journal of Asian Finance, Economics and Business, 5(3), 179-183.
- Treviño, K., & Weaver, R. (2003). Managing ethics in business organizations: Social scientific perspective. Stanford University Press.
- Tourism Quarterly Report. (2025). Quarterly Review Q1/2025.
- Zhang, J., Chiu, R., & Wei, L.-Q. (2009). On whistleblowing judgment and intention: The roles of positive mood and organizational ethical culture. Journal of Managerial Psychology, 24(7), 627-649.
-
-
Conceptualization
Hamza Khraim
-
Data curation
Hamza Khraim
-
Formal Analysis
Hamza Khraim
-
Funding acquisition
Hamza Khraim
-
Methodology
Hamza Khraim
-
Project administration
Hamza Khraim
-
Resources
Hamza Khraim
-
Software
Hamza Khraim
-
Validation
Hamza Khraim
-
Writing – original draft
Hamza Khraim
-
Writing – review & editing
Hamza Khraim
-
Conceptualization
-
The impact of strategic human resources planning on the organizational performance of public shareholding companies in Jordan
Shaker Al-Qudah
,
Abdallah Mishael Obeidat
,
Hosam Shrouf ,
Mohammed A. Abusweilem
doi: http://dx.doi.org/10.21511/ppm.18(1).2020.19
Problems and Perspectives in Management Volume 18, 2020 Issue #1 pp. 219-230 Views: 6101 Downloads: 4616 TO CITE АНОТАЦІЯPerformance management (PM) is a common practice used by organizations to assess and manage employees’ work. Much of PM research is closely related to management practices. Corporations in the public and nonprofit sector continuously develop PM programs to ensure the sustainability of their organizations.
The study aims to analyze the impact of strategic human resources planning on the organizational performance of Jordanian public shareholding companies for senior management and functional unit managers (human resources, marketing, finance, and accounting). The researchers surveyed all the public shareholding companies registered with the Jordan Securities Commission (JSC) in 2019, wherein they found that only 60 companies applied strategic planning and human resources planning (HRP) together. Two hundred and twenty questionnaires were distributed in 52 companies surveyed, and 203 were adopted for statistical analysis. Several statistical methods were used, most notably the multiple regression analysis. The researchers found out a statistically significant impact of the strategic human resources planning (integration of HRP and strategic planning; strategic participation) on organizational performance. The results showed that adopting the strategic HRP dimensions leads to an increase in an organization’s overall productivity, employee satisfaction and reputation, as well as reduced operating costs. HR managers must understand the effectiveness of strategically designed HR practices across functions. -
Relationships between human resource management practices, employee satisfaction, service quality, and employee service behavior in the hotel industry
Alhareth Mohammed Abu Hussein
,
Al Montaser Mohammad
,
Ahmad Alheet
,
Mahmoud Hussein Abu Joma
,
Salman Abu Lehyeh
doi: http://dx.doi.org/10.21511/ppm.21(1).2023.21
Problems and Perspectives in Management Volume 21, 2023 Issue #1 pp. 242-252 Views: 4804 Downloads: 1276 TO CITE АНОТАЦІЯThe hotel industry is critical in developing the economy. Moreover, it is the largest and most rapidly growing industry in Jordan. Employee satisfaction is a crucial element for the success of any organization, particularly in the hotel industry. Therefore, this study aims to examine the influence of human resource management (HRM) practices since these constructs could influence different outcomes at the workplace, such as employee satisfaction, service quality, and employee service behavior in the hotel industry. The study has undertaken five primary HRM practices – recruitment, capability, compensation, performance appraisal, and training and development (T&D) – to measure their impact on employee satisfaction, service quality, and employee service behavior. Data were collected from 290 employees and 290 customers of Jordan’s hotels across all categories in the four main tourist attractions: Amman, Petra, Aqaba, and the Dead Sea. A quantitative approach was employed using various statistical tools such as mean, tabulation of data, correlation, and ANOVA by SPSS software. The results indicated that HRM practices positively affect service quality, employee service behavior, and employee satisfaction. It was also found that when employees in Jordan’s hotel industry demonstrate excellent service behavior, the customer perceptions of service quality increase. Finally, effective human resource management strategy systematically organizes all individual human resource management measures to directly influence employee satisfaction, service behavior, and service quality in a way that leads hotels to achieve organizational success.
-
Strategic human resource management practices and human capital development: The role of employee commitment
Main Naser Alolayyan
,
Mohammad Sharif Alyahya
,
Dana Ahmad Omari
doi: http://dx.doi.org/10.21511/ppm.19(2).2021.13
Problems and Perspectives in Management Volume 19, 2021 Issue #2 pp. 157-169 Views: 4007 Downloads: 2692 TO CITE АНОТАЦІЯThis paper studied the influence of strategic human resource management on human capital development through the mediation of employee commitment. A descriptive cross-sectional study design was used to collect data from 514 participants (medical staff) from five hospitals in northern Jordan. The hospitals involved were from different sectors, including governmental, private, and university hospitals. Several analysis methods were used in the study: Confirmatory Factor Analysis (CFA), discriminant validity, and composite reliability. Direct and indirect hypothesis testing was also utilized using Structural Equation Modeling (SEM). The study showed that the practice of strategic human resource management had a direct positive impact on employee commitment; the practice of strategic human resource management had a direct positive impact on human capital development; the impact of employee commitment on human capital development was positive and direct; employee commitment has a partial mediating effect between both of them. Accordingly, HR managers in hospitals should move from “softer” responsibilities and traditional HR activities to a more strategic level (i.e., developmental strategy), where HR strategies are aligned and reinforce the hospital’s vision and mission and link organizational strategy to HR strategies. Healthcare managers should invest more in human capital through formal education and training.
Acknowledgments
The Deanship of Research at Jordan University of Science and Technology (JUST) in Jordan is acknowledged by authors for providing facilities through the research No. 488/2020 and research environment to accomplish the goals of this work. The authors thank Professor Fareed Nusair at the Department of Health Management & Policy, the Faculty of Medicine.

