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Purpose

This study aims to examine not only how high-performance or competent subordinates affect abusive supervision, focusing on its transmission mechanism and the boundary conditions involved in the process.

Design/methodology/approach

Data were collected from 291 supervisor-subordinate dyads in China using a time-lagged and multisource methods and hierarchical regression analysis was used to analyze the data.

Findings

The results indicate that subordinates’ competence advantage has a positive indirect effect on abusive supervision through perceived threat to status and a negative indirect effect on abusive supervision through positive affective experience. In other words, subordinates’ competence advantage exerts a double-edged sword effect on abusive supervision. Furthermore, supervisor-subordinate guanxi moderates both of these two indirect relationships.

Originality/value

This study helps to understand how supervisors interact with high-performance or competent employees. It also contributes to understanding how subordinates’ competence advantage, as a double-edged sword, influences abusive supervision through specific mechanisms and boundary conditions.

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