Leaders’ grit and followers psychological capital: Exploring moderating conditions

Authors

  • Arménio Rego Católica Porto Business School
  • Filipa Sobral Universidade Católica Portuguesa, Porto, CEDH, Faculdade de Educação e Psicologia
  • Ana Simões Católica Porto Business School
  • Cátia Duarte Católica Porto Business School
  • Francisco Reis Católica Porto Business School
  • Inês Quaresma Católica Porto Business School
  • Maria Guimarães Católica Porto Business School
  • Maria Teixeira Católica Porto Business School
  • Miguel Pina e Cunha Nova School of Business and Economics

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.17575/psicologia.v34i1.1435

Keywords:

leadership; grit; conveyed leader grit leader versus self-attributed grit; humility; social support; psychological capital.

Abstract

While it has been argued that grit (i.e., passion and perseverance for long-term goals) is crucial to the success of individuals and the effectiveness of leaders, some authors do not espouse such a perspective. Empirical research is scarce and inconclusive. We argue that, to better understand this construct, studies should include moderating conditions. We discuss three conditions: (1) conveyed leader grit versus self-attributed grit; (2) humility expressed by the leader; (3) social support expressed by the leader. In accordance with our conceptual model, (a) a leader who conveys high level of grit toward employees develop their psychological capital, (b) although this effect is mitigated or even nullified if the leader is devoid of humility and does not provide social support to employees. Distinctly, the leader fosters employees’ psychological capital if, in addition to convey a high level of grit, he also expresses humility and social support toward employees.

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Published

2020-08-07

How to Cite

Rego, A., Sobral, F., Simões, A., Duarte, C., Reis, F., Quaresma, I., Guimarães, M., Teixeira, M., & Cunha, M. P. e. (2020). Leaders’ grit and followers psychological capital: Exploring moderating conditions. PSICOLOGIA, 34(1), 1–12. https://doi.org/10.17575/psicologia.v34i1.1435

Issue

Section

Thematic Number - Organizational Behavior