Academic Journal

How is benevolent leadership linked to employee creativity? The mediating role of leader–member exchange and the moderating role of power distance orientation

17 pages 2016 Journal of Business Ethics Weipeng Lin Jingjing Ma Qi Zhang Jenny Li Feng Jiang

Journal Details

Journal of Business Ethics, 2016 Vol. 152 Issue 4 Pages 1099-1115

Keywords
Management
Journal Article, Academic Journal

Overview

Previous research has shown that virtuous leader behavior in the form of benevolent leadership has considerable impact on employee creativity. However, little is known as to how and under what conditions these constructs are linked. In the current research, we proposed and tested a moderated mediation model positing leader–member exchange (LMX) as a mediator, and employee power-distance orientation as a moderator of this relationship. Two studies were conducted to test our hypothesized model. In Study 1, repeated measured data collected from 284 Chinese employees in an information technology company demonstrated that benevolent leadership had a lagged effect on LMX. In Study 2, analyses of multisource and lagged data from 391 Chinese employees in 42 research and development teams, and their direct supervisors indicated that benevolent leadership was positively related to supervisor-rated employee creativity via LMX. In addition, the relationship between benevolent leadership and LMX was stronger for employees high in power-distance orientation. Theoretical implications of benevolent leadership’s research and practical contributions concerning promoting creativity in organizations where benevolent leaders prevail are also discussed.