Occupational Stress and Organizational Commitment: Does Sex and Managerial Status Matter?

Authors

  • Anthony Sumnaya Kumasey University of Professional Studies, Accra
  • Eric Delle Department of Business Administration, Faculty of Management, University of Professional Studies
  • Samuel Batchison Ofei Department of Marketing, Faculty of Management, University of Professional Studies

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.18533/ijbsr.v4i5.493

Keywords:

Occupational stress, organizational commitment, demographic factors, Service sector, Ghana.

Abstract

The study sought to investigate whether sex and managerial status have any effect on occupational stress and organizational commitment in the Ghanaian banking sector. Using a cross-sectional survey design, 327 participants were conveniently selected for the study. Reliable questionnaires were used to collect a heterogeneous sample for the study. The hypotheses were tested with Multivariate statistical test (MANOVA). The analysis showed that males differed significantly in organizational commitment than their female counterparts. However, no statistically significant sex and managerial status difference was found in occupational stress and organizational commitment. This means that, in terms of occupational stress, males did not differ significantly from their female counterparts. Similarly, managers did not differ significantly in their level of occupational stress from non-managers. Further, managers did not demonstrate significantly higher level of organizational commitment than non-managers. The implications of the findings on occupational stress and organizational commitment research have been discussed. 

Author Biography

  • Anthony Sumnaya Kumasey, University of Professional Studies, Accra
    Department of Business Administration, Lecturer

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Published

2014-05-31

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