This conceptual paper explores the impact of ethical leadership on trust in HRM practices during economic uncertainty and organizational change, integrating insights from leadership theory, SHRM literature, and perspectives on organizational justice to inform contemporary concerns over organizational legitimacy, fairness, and employee relations in organizations under crisis; set against a backdrop of macroeconomic volatility, inflation, involuntary workforce reductions, and further restructuring initiatives observed across the globe up to the middle of 2025, it is argued that ethical leadership serves an essential role in maintaining trust and legitimizing HRM practices by inherently shaping the design, communication, and enactment of key practices in areas such as layoffs, redeployment, performance management and internal communication under high uncertainty; more specifically, the analysis?put forth that ethical leaders, through moral role modelling, transparency, fairness, and stakeholder concern, provide normative expectations on the actions of HR professionals, signaling procedural and interactional justice to employees in ways that mitigate the common erosion of trust that accompanies downsizing and restructuring processes; utilizing an integrative conceptual framework, it further synthesizes relevant insights from ethical leadership theory, social exchange theory, organizational justice theory, and psychological contract theory to elucidate how trust in HRM can be preserved or rebuilt in the face of economic trade-offs between organizational survival and employee welfare; the paper's primary contribution is the development of a comprehensive conceptual framework delineating ethical leadership as an antecedent of trust in HRM, mediated by justice perceptions and transparent communication, with boundaries conditions iterated in terms of the intensity of uncertainty and consistency of management; additionally, a set of theoretically informed research propositions is articulated to direct future empirical analyses of trust dynamics during restructuring processes, a significant gap in the HRM literature that has primarily been studied in stable organizational contexts instead of crisis situations; theoretically, the paper extends ethical leadership and strategic human resource management frameworks into periods of disruption and reframes human resource management as a moral governance system under organizational change; managerially, it provides time-sensitive guidance for HR leaders and senior executives alike, noting the necessity of ethical leadership, transparency, and continuous investment in practices that sustain trust if organizational legitimacy, employee engagement and longer-term capability development are to be retained in times of economic uncertainty and restructuring.
Ethical Leadership, Trust in Human Resource Management, Organizational Restructuring, Economic Uncertainty, Organizational Justice, Crisis-Era Human Resource Management
IRE Journals:
Dr. Hegde Lata Narayan "Ethical Leadership and Trust in Human Resource Management Practices During Economic Uncertainty and Organizational Restructuring" Iconic Research And Engineering Journals Volume 9 Issue 2 2025 Page 1378-1388 https://doi.org/10.64388/IREV9I2-1709969
IEEE:
Dr. Hegde Lata Narayan
"Ethical Leadership and Trust in Human Resource Management Practices During Economic Uncertainty and Organizational Restructuring" Iconic Research And Engineering Journals, 9(2) https://doi.org/10.64388/IREV9I2-1709969