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Comparative Study
| Published: May 15, 2026
The Invisible Attrition: Toxic Leadership, Learning Potential and Quiet Quitting among Indian Millennials and Generation Z Employees
Master of Arts, Organisational Psychology, Amity Institute of Psychology and Allied Sciences, Amity University, Noida Uttar Pradesh, India
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Assistant Professor, Amity Institute of Psychology and Allied Sciences, Amity University, Noida Uttar Pradesh, India
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DIP: 18.01.106.20261402
DOI: 10.25215/1402.106
ABSTRACT
Workplace disengagement among younger employees emerged as a structurally significant concern in contemporary Indian organizations. This study examined the relationship among toxic leadership, perceived learning potential of the workplace and quiet quitting behavioral tendencies among Millennial and Generation Z employees in the Indian private sector and investigated whether generational cohort membership produces meaningful differences in how these constructs are experienced. Using a quantitative cross-sectional design with a stratified sample of 250 private-sector employees, data were collected through three validated psychometric instruments and analysed using Pearson correlation, independent samples t-tests, and hierarchical multiple regression. Findings revealed statistically significant associations among all three variables. Toxic leadership emerged as the dominant predictor of quiet quitting, while perceived learning potential functioned as a meaningful protective resource. Generational cohorts differed significantly in toxic leadership and learning potential perceptions, yet demonstrated comparable quiet quitting tendencies, repositioning disengagement as an organizational rather than generational phenomenon.
Keywords
Toxic Leadership, Quiet Quitting, Learning Potential of the Workplace, Millennial employees, Generation Z employees, Indian private sector, employee disengagement
This is an Open Access Research distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (www.creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any Medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
© 2026, Vij, L. & Bedi, A.
Received: April 25, 2026; Revision Received: May 11, 2026; Accepted: May 15, 2026
Article Overview
ISSN 2348-5396
ISSN 2349-3429
18.01.106.20261402
10.25215/1402.106
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Published in Volume 14, Issue 2, April-June, 2026
