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Examining the role of value congruence, professional identity, and managerial job engagement in the budgetary participation-performance link.

BACKGROUND: In health care, important phenomena of perceived incompatibility between professional and managerial values have emerged as consequences of New Public Management reforms. Although there is a growing evidence on the variation in the enactment of hybrid roles by medical managers, existing research in health care management is mostly descriptive with little emphasis on the conditions under which hybrid roles are enacted and, importantly, on the effects of this variation on performance.

PURPOSE: In this article, we seek to fill this research gap by empirically examining (a) whether budgetary participation aligns professional and organizational values, (b) the impact of this alignment on employees' work-related feelings and managerial performance, and (c) the effect of professional identity on value congruence.

METHODOLOGY: Data were collected by a survey conducted in an Italian hospital, and partial least square was used to test the relationships among variables.

RESULTS: Overall, results show that (a) high involvement in budgeting is instrumental in facilitating medical managers' value congruence, and this, in turn, positively effects managerial job engagement; (b) the effect of budgetary participation on value congruence depends on the extent of professional identity; and (c) as a result of enhanced value congruence and managerial job engagement, employees tend to deliver superior role performance.

PRACTICE IMPLICATION: Findings of this study provide some guidance for managers on how organizations can take steps to guarantee effective support to hybrid professionals.

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