Attitude, job embeddedness, and turnover intention in GIG workers in Thailand: the roles of social influence

Published date
2022
Resource type
Publisher
Bangkok : Assumption University Press
ISBN
ISSN
DOI
Call no.
Other identifier(s)
Edition
Copyrighted date
Language
eng
File type
application/pdf
Extent
15 pages
Other title(s)
Advisor
Other Contributor(s)
Citation
ABAC Journal Vol. 42 No. 4 (October-December 2022), 168-182
Degree name
Degree level
Degree discipline
Degree department
Degree grantor
Abstract
This research explored the association between the social influence of gig workers in Thailand and the level of attitude towards job insecurity and perceived behavioral controlamongthe perceptions of gig job workers. The study contributes to the literature by investigating job embeddedness and the level of turnover intentions. Social influence was investigated as a moderating factor that might affect the attitudes of the workers or have adirect influence on turnover intentions. Survey data were collected from 399 gig workers in 5 regions across Thailand. Multiple regression analysis and partial least squares structural equation modeling were used for data analysis. The results supported a negative association between job insecurity and job embeddedness, and a positive association between social influence and turnover intentions. Moreover, the analysis supported the moderating effect of social influence on gig workers attitudes toward job embeddedness.
Table of contents
Description
punsarn.dc.description.sponsorship
Spatial Coverage
Rights
This work is protected by copyright. Reproduction or distribution of the work in any format is prohibited without written permission of the copyright owner.
Access rights
Rights holder(s)
Location
View External Resources