Porcelain Publishing / JCHRM / Volume 17 / Issue 1 / DOI: 10.47297/wspchrmWSP2040-800511.20261701
ARTICLE

Job Stress, Emotional Exhaustion, and Work-Family Conflict: A Moderated Mediation Model

Sina Eslamdoust1* Jeeyoon Jeong2 Ji Hoon Lee1 Ye Dai1 Bei Lyu3*
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1 Southern Illinois University, College of Business and Analytics, 1025 Lincoln Drive, Carbondale, IL 62901, USA
2 Korea University Business School, Seoul, Republic of Korea
3 Panyapiwat Institute of Management, 85 Chaeng Watthana Rd, Tambon Bang Talat, Pak Kret District, Nonthaburi 11120, Thailand
Published: 4 February 2026
© 2026 by the Author(s). This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/)
Abstract

Despite extensive research on work-family conflict (WFC), questions remain about when and why job stress translates into family domain interference. Drawing on Conservation of Resources (COR) theory (Hobfoll, 1989), this study examines whether emotional exhaustion mediates the relationship between job stress and WFC, and whether authoritarian leadership moderates this process. Using data from 1,095 U.S. employees, we find that emotional exhaustion serves as a key mediating mechanism, consistent with resource depletion arguments. More importantly, we demonstrate that authoritarian leadership significantly amplifies the stress-exhaustion relationship through mechanisms identified in prior research: reduced autonomy, increased monitoring, and blocked recovery. These findings extend COR theory by showing that leadership context shapes resource depletion processes. Our results suggest that interventions targeting stress alone may be insufficient without considering the leadership environment that determines how stress affects employees' resources and subsequent work-family outcomes.

Keywords
Job stress
Emotional exhaustion
Authoritarian leadership
Work-family conflict
Conservation of Resources Theory (COR)
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Journal of Chinese Human Resources Management, Electronic ISSN: 2040-8013 Print ISSN: 2040-8005, Published by Porcelain Publishing