Impact of Ethical Leadership on Autonomy and Self-Efficacy in VirtualWork Environments: The Disintegrating Effect of an Egoistic Climate
Other authors
Publication date
2025ISSN
2076-328X
Abstract
Ethical management is key to ensuring organizational sustainability, through
resources such as autonomy or self-efficacy. However, economic and social uncertainty
occasionally leads to adaptive responses that prioritize profit as the primary interest, blurring
the integrating role of ethical leadership. There are a number of studies that support
this reality in a virtual work environment. This sector-specific and cross-sectional research
explores how ethical leadership influences self-efficacy among teleworkers, through active
commitment to job autonomy, and how an egoistic climate hinders this influence. The analysis
is quantitative and correlational, and the sample includes 448 teleworkers. A model of
conditional indirect effects, including both a mediation process and a moderation process,
is used. The results support that ethical leadership enhances followers’ self-efficacy through
a redistribution of responsibilities, which increases the perception of autonomy. However,
when ethical leadership coincides with a climate that has opposing interests, such as an
egoistic climate, ethical leadership is unable to counteract it, and its effect on self-efficacy
gradually diminishes. The benefits of this management style are widely known, but it is
crucial to understand under what circumstances it loses efficacy. This research presents a
new theoretical model that contributes to the existing literature on ethical leadership. Lastly,
organizations that embrace ethical leadership can avoid the emergence of ethical climates
disconnected from collective benefit, such as those characterized by selfishness, which
hinder prosocial motivation. In this context, ethical leadership fosters the development of
high-quality interpersonal relationships with followers, which are considered essential for
creating an environment conducive to group learning. Consequently, change management
in organizations necessitates the adoption of an ethical system that enhances self-efficacy
through moral principles, rather than relying solely on individualistic aspects.
Document Type
Article
Document version
Published version
Language
English
Subject (CDU)
65 - Communication and transport industries. Accountancy. Business management. Public relations
Pages
27 p.
Publisher
MDPI
Citation
Santiago-Torner, C., Corral-Marfil, J.A., Jiménez-Pérez, Y., Tarrats-Pons, E. (2025). Impact of Ethical Leadership on Autonomy and Self-Efficacy in Virtual Work Environments: The Disintegrating Effect of an Egoistic Climate. Behavioral Sciences, 15(1), num: 95. https://doi.org/10.3390/bs15010095
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