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Arbeitszufriedenheit

Zufriedene Mitarbeiterinnen und Mitarbeiter sind produktiver, seltener krank und verursachen geringere Sozialkosten. Arbeitszufriedenheit hat aber nicht nur Vorteile für Betriebe. Das Wohlbefinden am Arbeitsplatz ist auch ein wichtiger Indikator für die Qualität der Arbeit selbst. Doch was ist überhaupt Arbeitszufriedenheit? Wie wird sie gemessen? Welche Faktoren und Prozesse fördern, welche schränken sie ein?

Das Thema Arbeitszufriedenheit steht seit Jahrzehnten im Mittelpunkt kritischer wissenschaftlicher Auseinandersetzungen. Die Infoplattform gibt einen Überblick über aktuelle Arbeiten und ausgewählte ältere Publikationen zu theoretischen Ansätzen und empirischen Resultaten der Arbeitszufriedenheitsforschung.

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  • Literaturhinweis

    Determinants of job interestingness: Comparison of Japan and other high-income countries (2021)

    Asuyama, Yoko;

    Zitatform

    Asuyama, Yoko (2021): Determinants of job interestingness: Comparison of Japan and other high-income countries. In: Labour Economics, Jg. 73. DOI:10.1016/j.labeco.2021.102082

    Abstract

    "Interest in a job enhances job satisfaction, learning, and task performance, and deters the job-holder from quitting. This paper quantifies the importance of the key determinants of job interestingness for the first time. It also explores the reasons why there are much fewer interesting jobs in Japan than in other high-income countries (H). Decomposition analyses are performed using the International Social Survey Programme and Japanese panel survey data. In both H and Japan, interest match and prosocial meaning of the job are two of the three most important predictors of job interestingness. The third top predictor is job autonomy in H, whereas in Japan it is relatedness (relationship with management and colleagues), implying that the most effective ways to make a job interesting vary across cultures and work organizations. The largest factor explaining the job interestingness gap between Japan and H is Japan's lower level of job autonomy, although promoting autonomy is a less effective way to enhance job interestingness in Japan." (Author's abstract, IAB-Doku, © 2022 Elsevier) ((en))

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  • Literaturhinweis

    Coworking-Atmosphären: Zum Zusammenspiel von kuratierten Räumen und der Sicht der Coworkenden als raumhandelnde Subjekte (2021)

    Bernhardt, Alexandra;

    Zitatform

    Bernhardt, Alexandra (2021): Coworking-Atmosphären. Zum Zusammenspiel von kuratierten Räumen und der Sicht der Coworkenden als raumhandelnde Subjekte. (Research), Wiesbaden: Springer, 512 S. DOI:10.1007/978-3-658-35888-4

    Abstract

    "Die Studie von Alexandra Bernhardt beschäftigt sich mit Coworking Spaces und ihren Atmosphären. Neben einer umfassenden Betrachtung der Rolle von Atmosphären wird die besondere Bedeutung von Gemeinschaft im Kontext dieser Arbeitsräume näher beleuchtet. Den Kern der Untersuchung bilden zwei Fallstudien in urbanen Coworking Spaces, wobei ein an der Ethnografie orientiertes, methodenplurales qualitatives Forschungsdesign verfolgt wird. Im Rahmen der Analyse wird zum einen betrachtet, was Coworking im Alltag und damit die neue Gemeinschaftlichkeit bei der Arbeit ausmacht: Dabei werden relevante Praktiken und Rituale, räumliche Arrangements und Atmosphären in ihrer Komposition herausgearbeitet. Zum anderen rücken die Coworkenden, ihr Raumhandeln und damit verbundene Haltungen näher in den Blick: Es wird aufgezeigt, wie sich die Nutzer*innen Coworking Spaces als Arbeits- und Gemeinschaftsräume erschließen und welche Rolle Atmosphären spielen. Zudem werden soziale Gebilde herausgestellt, die von den Coworkenden in Bezug auf ihren Coworking Space aufgegriffen werden und die den Coworking-Space-Alltag mitprägen. Auch werden Spannungen aufgedeckt, die aus einem Nebeneinander von Gemeinschafts- und Dienstleistungslogik entstehen, und der Umgang damit näher betrachtet." (Verlagsangaben, IAB-Doku)

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  • Literaturhinweis

    Identity and Well-Being in the Skilled Crafts and Trades (2021)

    Binder, Martin; Blankenberg, Ann-Kathrin;

    Zitatform

    Binder, Martin & Ann-Kathrin Blankenberg (2021): Identity and Well-Being in the Skilled Crafts and Trades. (Working paper / The Levy Economics Institute 997), Annandale-on-Hudson, NY, 61 S.

    Abstract

    "We analyze the extent to which occupational identity is conducive to worker well-being. Using a unique survey dataset of individuals working in the German skilled crafts and trades, we use a novel occupational identity measure that captures identity more broadly than just referring to organizational identification and social group membership, but rather comprises personal and relational elements inherent in one's work. The latter are linked to significant social interactions a worker has in their job and the former to specific work characteristics of the work conducted itself. We find that higher job satisfaction is related to a stronger sense of occupational identity in our sample. This relationship is quite sizable and robust across model specifications, whereas income is not associated with job satisfaction in most models. Occupational identity is positively associated with a number of work characteristics, viz. task significance, task and skill variety, as well as social support, and our analysis shows that identity mediates the influence of these characteristics with regard to job satisfaction." (Author's abstract, IAB-Doku) ((en))

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  • Literaturhinweis

    Self-employment and Subjective Well-Being (2021)

    Binder, Martin; Blankenberg, Ann-Kathrin;

    Zitatform

    Binder, Martin & Ann-Kathrin Blankenberg (2021): Self-employment and Subjective Well-Being. (GLO discussion paper / Global Labor Organization 744), Essen, 34 S.

    Abstract

    "Self-employment contributes to employment growth and innovativeness and many individuals want to become self-employed due to the autonomy and exibility it brings. Using "subjective well-being" as a broad summary measure that evaluates an individual's experience of being self-employed, the chapter discusses evidence and explanations why self-employment is positively associated with job satisfaction, even though the self-employed often earn less than their employed peers, work longer hours and experience more stress and higher job demands. Despite being more satisfied with their jobs, the self-employed do not necessarily enjoy higher overall life satisfaction, which is due to heterogeneity of types of self-employment, as well as motivational factors, work characteristics and institutional setups across countries." (Author's abstract, IAB-Doku) ((en))

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  • Literaturhinweis

    Beyond income inequality: non-monetary rewards to work (2021)

    Clark, Andrew E. ; Cotofan, Maria; Layard, Richard;

    Zitatform

    Clark, Andrew E., Maria Cotofan & Richard Layard (2021): Beyond income inequality: non-monetary rewards to work. In: Centrepiece. The Magazine of The Centre for Economic Performance, Jg. 26, H. 2, S. 26-28.

    Abstract

    "Discussion of income inequality focuses primarily on wages with limited consideration of the non-monetary rewards to work, not least the satisfaction that employees experience in doing their jobs. Andrew Clark, Maria Cotofan and Richard Layard use data on subjective wellbeing to reveal the full extent of UK labour market inequality." (Author's abstract, IAB-Doku) ((en))

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  • Literaturhinweis

    Overqualification at Work: A Review and Synthesis of the Literature (2021)

    Erdogan, Berrin; Bauer, Talya N.;

    Zitatform

    Erdogan, Berrin & Talya N. Bauer (2021): Overqualification at Work: A Review and Synthesis of the Literature. In: Annual Review of Organizational Psychology and Organizational Behavior, Jg. 8, S. 259-283. DOI:10.1146/annurev-orgpsych-012420-055831

    Abstract

    "Both perceived and objective measures of employee overqualification can impact job attitudes, various workplace behaviors, and work relationships. Utilizing motivation and capability-based theoretical approaches, this review summarizes research regarding the antecedents (demographic influences, personality traits, relational influences, job characteristics) and outcomes (individual health and well-being, turnover intentions and turnover, job performance, organizational citizenship behaviors, interpersonal relationships, innovative behaviors, counterproductive work behaviors, and career success) of overqualification. In addition, we review work done to date regarding the moderators and mediators of these relationships. Finally, we offer future directions for research." (Author's abstract, IAB-Doku) ((en))

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  • Literaturhinweis

    Arbeitszufriedenheit und Arbeitsbedingungen (2021)

    Ganserer, Angelika; Steffes, Susanne; Kampkötter, Patrick ;

    Zitatform

    Ganserer, Angelika, Patrick Kampkötter & Susanne Steffes (2021): Arbeitszufriedenheit und Arbeitsbedingungen. (Bundesministerium für Arbeit und Soziales. Forschungsbericht 590), Berlin, 48 S.

    Abstract

    "Die Forschungsstudie "Arbeitsqualität und wirtschaftlicher Erfolg" zielt darauf, mögliche Zusammenhänge zwischen der Arbeitsqualität der Beschäftigten und dem wirtschaftlichen Erfolg von Betrieben zu untersuchen. Sie wird vom Bundesministerium für Arbeit und Soziales (BMAS) und vom Institut für Arbeitsmarkt- und Berufsforschung (IAB) getragen und vom IAB, vom Seminar für Allgemeine Betriebswirtschaftslehre und Personalwirtschaftslehre der Universität zu Köln, dem Lehrstuhl für Managerial Accounting der Eberhard Karls Universität Tübingen und vom Zentrum für Europäische Wirtschaftsforschung (ZEW) durchgeführt. Es handelt sich um eine Längsschnittstudie, in der in vier Befragungswellen seit 2012 jeweils eine Betriebs- und eine Beschäftigtenbefragung durchgeführt wurde. Neben der Produktivität ist die Zufriedenheit von Beschäftigten mit ihrem Beruf und Arbeitsumfeld ein Qualitätsmaß von Arbeitgeber-Arbeitnehmer-Beziehungen, das stark im Fokus der Unternehmen steht. Im Sonderbericht „Arbeitszufriedenheit und Arbeitsbedingungen“ wird der Zusammenhang von psychologischen Erlebniszuständen und der Arbeitszufriedenheit untersucht." (Autorenreferat, IAB-Doku)

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  • Literaturhinweis

    Employees as reputation advocates: Dimensions of employee job satisfaction explaining employees’ recommendation intention (2021)

    Gross, Hellen P.; Willems, Jurgen ; Ingerfurth, Stefan;

    Zitatform

    Gross, Hellen P., Stefan Ingerfurth & Jurgen Willems (2021): Employees as reputation advocates: Dimensions of employee job satisfaction explaining employees’ recommendation intention. In: Journal of Business Research, Jg. 134, S. 405-413. DOI:10.1016/j.jbusres.2021.05.021

    Abstract

    "Reputation is a crucial asset for service organizations, in particular when actual service quality is hard to assess, e.g. in the context of hospitals. Employees and their recommendation intentions to other professionals and potential patients are crucial in the reputation building process. Against this background, we test with a quantitative-exploratory approach, for 1,022 employees in two German hospitals, how eleven dimensions of employees’ job satisfaction explain their recommendation intention on behalf of the hospital they work. Moreover, we explore this for different employee groups. Our results show that there are different employee job satisfaction dimensions explaining recommendation intention for different employee groups such as nurses, doctors, or employees in the administrative field. We frame our findings against the broad but scattered management literature that is relevant for job satisfaction and organizational reputation, and discuss implications for practice and further research." (Author's abstract, IAB-Doku, © 2023 Elsevier) ((en))

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  • Literaturhinweis

    Working Time Mismatch and Job Satisfaction: The Role of Employees' Time Autonomy and Gender (2021)

    Grund, Christian ; Tilkes, Katja Rebecca;

    Zitatform

    Grund, Christian & Katja Rebecca Tilkes (2021): Working Time Mismatch and Job Satisfaction. The Role of Employees' Time Autonomy and Gender. (IZA discussion paper 14732), Bonn, 36 S.

    Abstract

    "Evidence shows that working time mismatch, i.e. the difference between actual and desired working hours, is negatively related to employees’ job satisfaction. Using longitudinal data from the German Socio-Economic Panel, we examine the potential moderating effect of working time autonomy on this relation and we also consider the corresponding role of gender. First, individual fixed effects panel estimations reaffirm both the negative link of working hours mismatch and the positive relation of working time autonomy to employees’ job satisfaction. Second, our results show a positive moderating relation of working time autonomy on the link between mismatch and job satisfaction. Third, our analyses hint at gender-specific differences: particularly women seem to benefit from the moderation role of working time autonomy" (Author's abstract, IAB-Doku) ((en))

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  • Literaturhinweis

    Adopting Telework. The causal impact of working from home on subjective well-being in 2020 (2021)

    Gueguen, Guillaume; Senik, Claudia ;

    Zitatform

    Gueguen, Guillaume & Claudia Senik (2021): Adopting Telework. The causal impact of working from home on subjective well-being in 2020. (PSE working paper / Paris School of Economics 2021-65), Paris, 36 S.

    Abstract

    "Using the UK household longitudinal survey, we uncover a positive effect of work from home on life satisfaction, which is driven by partnered people and those without children at home. Concerning mental health, there is no average effect of telework, except for those living in rural areas, but this hides a dynamic evolution, as mental health initially deteriorates in the first months of telework, but improves after a period of adaptation, especially the feeling of being useful, of being a worthy person, and of being able to concentrate." (Author's abstract, IAB-Doku) ((en))

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  • Literaturhinweis

    Worker wellbeing and productivity in advanced economies: Re-examining the link (2021)

    Isham, Amy; Mair, Simon; Jackson, Tim;

    Zitatform

    Isham, Amy, Simon Mair & Tim Jackson (2021): Worker wellbeing and productivity in advanced economies: Re-examining the link. In: Ecological economics, Jg. 184. DOI:10.1016/j.ecolecon.2021.106989

    Abstract

    "Labour productivity is a key concept for understanding the way modern economies use resources and features prominently in ecological economics. Ecological economists have questioned the desirability of labour productivity growth on both environmental and social grounds. In this paper we aim to contribute to ongoing debates by focusing on the link between labour productivity and worker wellbeing. First, we review the evidence for the happy-productive worker thesis, which suggests labour productivity could be improved by increasing worker wellbeing. Second, we review the evidence on ways that productivity growth may undermine worker wellbeing. We find there is experimental evidence demonstrating a causal effect of worker wellbeing on productivity, but that the relationship can also sometimes involve resource-intensive mediators. Taken together with the evidence of a negative impact on worker wellbeing from productivity growth, we conclude that a relentless pursuit of productivity growth is potentially counterproductive, not only in terms of worker wellbeing, but even in terms of long-term productivity." (Author's abstract, IAB-Doku) ((en))

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  • Literaturhinweis

    Stadt vs. Land: Eine Querschnittsstudie zu Arbeitszufriedenheit und –belastung von jungen Ärzten in Sachsen (2021)

    Jung, Franziska Ulrike; Röhr, Susanne; Deutsch, Tobias; Riedel-Heller, Steffi G.;

    Zitatform

    Jung, Franziska Ulrike, Susanne Röhr, Tobias Deutsch & Steffi G. Riedel-Heller (2021): Stadt vs. Land: Eine Querschnittsstudie zu Arbeitszufriedenheit und –belastung von jungen Ärzten in Sachsen. In: Das Gesundheitswesen, Jg. 83, H. 8/9, S. 632-838. DOI:10.1055/a-1173-9188

    Abstract

    "Ärztemangel und eine damit verbundene Unterversorgung der Patienten bedroht besonders ländliche, strukturschwache Regionen. Bisherige Studien konzentrieren sich auf Faktoren, die die Niederlassungsentscheidung auf dem Land begünstigen oder verhindern. Über Faktoren wie Arbeitszufriedenheit und Arbeitsbelastung und geografisch bedingte Unterschiede in Deutschland ist bisher wenig bekannt. Ziel der Studie war es diese Faktoren einem detaillierten Stadt-Land-Vergleich mittels einer sekundären Analyse von Surveydaten zu unterziehen. Hierfür konnten Daten von 1813 in Sachsen praktizierenden Ärzten (25–40 Jahre), welche postalisch kontaktiert wurden, analysiert werden. Die Ergebnisse zeigen, dass sich hinsichtlich der Arbeitszufriedenheit lediglich akzentuierte Unterschiede feststellen lassen. In Bezug auf Arbeitsbelastung lassen sich keine signifikanten Unterschiede zwischen Ärzten, die auf dem Land oder in der Stadt tätig sind, finden." (Autorenreferat, IAB-Doku)

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  • Literaturhinweis

    Becoming self-employed from inactivity: an in-depth analysis of satisfaction (2021)

    Justo, Raquel ; Congregado, Emilio ; Román, Concepción;

    Zitatform

    Justo, Raquel, Emilio Congregado & Concepción Román (2021): Becoming self-employed from inactivity: an in-depth analysis of satisfaction. In: Small business economics, Jg. 56, H. 1, S. 145-187. DOI:10.1007/s11187-019-00212-2

    Abstract

    "Inactive individuals represent a pool of potential labour whose activation entails economic and social advantages. Additionally, being active allows individuals to cover their basic psychological needs—autonomy, competence and relatedness—which leads to greater satisfaction through self-determination. We posit that self-employment may be an attractive alternative because its nonpecuniary aspects may suit their needs better. Using data from the European Community Household Panel, we applied propensity score matching techniques to analyse the change in satisfaction with main activity of inactive individuals becoming self-employed compared to those becoming employees and those remaining inactive. We further perform separate analyses for homemakers, retirees and students to account for heterogeneity within inactivity. We find that self-employment is associated with more satisfaction than remaining inactive in the case of retirees and homemakers, while students tend to experience a larger increase in satisfaction when entering self-employment compared to paid employment. The implications of these results for activation and entrepreneurship policies are discussed." (Author's abstract, IAB-Doku, © Springer-Verlag) ((en))

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  • Literaturhinweis

    Overqualification as Moderator for the Link Between Job Changes and Job Satisfaction Among Immigrated and Native-born People in Germany (2021)

    Khalil, Samir; Lietz, Almuth; Mayer, Sabrina Jasmin ;

    Zitatform

    Khalil, Samir, Almuth Lietz & Sabrina Jasmin Mayer (2021): Overqualification as Moderator for the Link Between Job Changes and Job Satisfaction Among Immigrated and Native-born People in Germany. (SocArXiv papers), 32 S. DOI:10.31219/osf.io/q7nu2

    Abstract

    "Job satisfaction is a major driver of an individual’s subjective well-being and thus affects public health, societal prosperity, and organizations, as dissatisfied employees are less productive and more likely to change jobs. However, changing jobs does not necessarily lead to higher job satisfaction in the long run: instead, previous studies have shown that changing jobs only increases job satisfaction for a shorter period of time before it gradually falls back to similar levels as before. This phenomenon is known as the honeymoon-hangover pattern. In our study, we identify an important new moderator of the relation between job changes and job satisfaction: the job-education match of job change. Based on relative deprivation theory, we argue that a job change out of overqualification lowers the likelihood of negative comparisons and thus increases the honeymoon period and lessens the hangover. In addition, we investigate whether this moderating effect is weaker for immigrants, since the phenomenon of overqualification occurs more frequently among them. We use data from the Socio-Economic Panel ranging from 1994-2018 and focus specifically on individual-periods of employees before and after job changes (N=134,417). Our results confirm that a change to a qualificationadequate job has a stronger and longer-lasting effect on job satisfaction which is lower for respondents born abroad." (Author's abstract, IAB-Doku) ((en))

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  • Literaturhinweis

    Soziographie der Arbeitszufriedenheit (2021)

    Martin, Albert; Cardinali, Luca;

    Zitatform

    Martin, Albert & Luca Cardinali (2021): Soziographie der Arbeitszufriedenheit. (Schriften aus dem Institut für Mittelstandsforschung / Universität Lüneburg 61), Lüneburg, 246 S.

    Abstract

    "Der vorliegende Beitrag befasst sich mit der Soziographie der Arbeitszufriedenheit. In Studien zur Arbeitszufriedenheit werden soziographische Merkmale oft als Kontrollgrößen eingesetzt. Ihre Berücksichtigung bei der Datenanalyse soll die Frage beantworten, ob sich der Einfluss von Determinanten der Arbeitszufriedenheit (Arbeitsinhalte, Arbeitsbedingungen, persönliche Dispositionen usw.) für unterschiedliche Personengruppen und Situationen jeweils anders darstellt. Die Berücksichtigung von Kontrollgrößen macht aber nur dann Sinn, wenn diese selbst eine empirische Beziehung entweder zu den Determinanten der Arbeitszufriedenheit und/oder zu der Arbeitszufriedenheit selbst aufweisen. Dem vorliegenden Beitrag geht es um die Frage, ob sich Zusammenhänge zwischen bedeutsamen soziographischen Merkmalen und der Arbeitszufriedenheit aufzeigen lassen. Als Datengrundlage dienen die 35 Erhebungswellen des Sozioökonomischen Panels (SOEP) von 1984 bis 2018. Im Einzelnen betrachtet werden die Variablen Erwerbsstatus, Geschlecht, Alter, Schulabschluss, Hochschulabschluss, Berufsstatus, Betriebszugehörigkeit und Unternehmensgröße. Für die meisten dieser Größen ergeben sich, wenn überhaupt, nur sehr schwache statistische Beziehungen mit der Arbeitszufriedenheit. Eine Ausnahme macht der Berufsstatus. Die Qualifikationsanforderungen, die sich damit verknüpfen und die hierarchische Position haben einen beachtlichen Einfluss auf die Arbeitszufriedenheit. Bemerkenswert ist die große Stabilität der Befunde über alle Erhebungsjahre von 1984 bis 2018 hinweg." (Autorenreferat, IAB-Doku)

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  • Literaturhinweis

    Verlaufsformen der Arbeitszufriedenheit (2021)

    Martin, Albert;

    Zitatform

    Martin, Albert (2021): Verlaufsformen der Arbeitszufriedenheit. (Schriften aus dem Institut für Mittelstandsforschung / Universität Lüneburg 60), Lüneburg, 51 S.

    Abstract

    "Im vorliegenden Beitrag geht es um die Veränderung der Arbeitszufriedenheit und um die Identifikation von zeitlichen Verlaufsmustern der Arbeitszufriedenheit. Als Grundlage der Analyse dienen die Daten des Sozioökonomischen Panels aus mittlerweile 35 Erhebungswellen (1984 bis 2018). Die Analyse umfasst 3.345 Zeitreihen, die jeweils einen Zeitraum von 15 Jahren umspannen. Zur Typisierung der einzelnen Arbeitszufriedenheitsverläufe werden die Regressionsrechnung und die Clusteranalyse verwendet. Der Haupttypus folgt dem generellen Trend, wonach die Arbeitszufriedenheit, von einem mäßig hohen Niveau ausgehend, stagniert bzw. sich im Lauf der Zeit leicht vermindert. Es gibt daneben allerdings auch Fälle, die auf einem hohen Arbeitszufriedenheitsniveau verbleiben. Und auf der anderen Seite findet man nicht wenige Personen, deren Arbeitszufriedenheit im negativen Bereich verharrt. Eine weitere Gruppe wird von Personen gebildet, deren Arbeits-zufriedenheit relativ großen Schwankungen ausgesetzt ist. Von den soziographischen Variablen Alter, Geschlecht und Berufsstatus gehen keine nennenswerten Wirkungen aus. Eine gesonderte Betrachtung der Unternehmensgröße erbringt, dass Personen, die dauerhaft in einem Kleinbetrieb arbeiten, eine größere Arbeitszufriedenheit aufweisen als Personen in größeren Unternehmen. Neben der Darstellung der inhaltlichen Einsichten, die die Zeitreihenanalyse erbringt, erfolgt eine Diskussion über die Verwendung der Modellergebnisse für auf die Zukunft gerichtete Szenario-Analyse." (Autorenreferat, IAB-Doku)

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  • Literaturhinweis

    Time, Income and Subjective Well-Being - 20 Years of Interdependent Multidimensional Polarization in Germany (2021)

    Merz, Joachim; Scherg, Bettina;

    Zitatform

    Merz, Joachim & Bettina Scherg (2021): Time, Income and Subjective Well-Being - 20 Years of Interdependent Multidimensional Polarization in Germany. (IZA discussion paper 14870), Bonn, 40 S.

    Abstract

    "Society drifts apart in many dimensions. Economists focus on income of the poor and rich and the distribution of income but a broader spectrum of dimensions is required to draw the picture of multiple facets of individual life. In our study of multidimensional polarization we extend the income dimension by time, a pre-requisite and fundamental resource of any individual activity. In particular, we consider genuine personal time as a pronounced source of social participation in the sense of social inclusion/exclusion and Amartya Sen's capability approach. With an interdependence approach to multidimensional polarization we allow compensation between time and income, parameters of a CES-type subjective well-being function, where a possible substitution is evaluated empirically by the German population instead of arbitrarily chosen. Beyond subjective well-being indices we propose and apply a new intensity/gap measure to multidimensional polarization, the mean minimum polarization gap 2DGAP. This polarization intensity measure provides transparency with regard to each single attribute, which is important for targeted policies, while at the same time their interdependent relations is respected. The empirical investigation of interdependent multidimensional polarization incidence and intensity uses the German Socio-Economic Panel (GSOEP) and detailed time use diary data from the three German Time Use Surveys (GTUS) 1991/92, 2001/02 and the actual 2012/13. We focus on the working individuals where the working poor requires increasing interest in the economic and social political discussion. The microeconometric two-stage selectivity corrected estimation of interdependent multidimensional risk (incidence) and intensity quantifies socio-economic factors behind. Four striking results appear: First, genuine personal leisure time additional to income is a significant subjective well-being and polarization dimension. Second, its interdependence, its compensation/substitution, ev" (Author's abstract, IAB-Doku) ((en))

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  • Literaturhinweis

    The impact of automation and artificial intelligence on worker well-being (2021)

    Nazareno, Luísa ; Schiff, Daniel S. ;

    Zitatform

    Nazareno, Luísa & Daniel S. Schiff (2021): The impact of automation and artificial intelligence on worker well-being. In: Technology in Society, Jg. 67. DOI:10.1016/j.techsoc.2021.101679

    Abstract

    "Discourse surrounding the future of work often treats technological substitution of workers as a cause for concern, but complementarity as a good. However, while automation and artificial intelligence may improve productivity or wages for those who remain employed, they may also have mixed or negative impacts on worker well-being. This study considers five hypothetical channels through which automation may impact worker well-being: influencing worker freedom, sense of meaning, cognitive load, external monitoring, and insecurity. We apply a measure of automation risk to a set of 402 occupations to assess whether automation predicts impacts on worker well-being along the dimensions of job satisfaction, stress, health, and insecurity. Findings based on a 2002–2018 dataset from the General Social Survey reveal that workers facing automation risk appear to experience less stress, but also worse health, and minimal or negative impacts on job satisfaction. These impacts are more concentrated on workers facing the highest levels of automation risk. This article encourages new research directions by revealing important heterogeneous effects of technological complementarity. We recommend that firms, policymakers, and researchers not conceive of technological complementarity as a uniform good, and instead direct more attention to mixed well-being impacts of automation and artificial intelligence on workers." (Author's abstract, IAB-Doku) ((en))

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  • Literaturhinweis

    Being Your Own Boss and Bossing Others: The Moderating Effect of Managing Others on Work Meaning and Autonomy for the Self-Employed and Employees (2021)

    Nikolova, Milena ; Nikolaev, Boris ; Boudreaux, Christopher;

    Zitatform

    Nikolova, Milena, Boris Nikolaev & Christopher Boudreaux (2021): Being Your Own Boss and Bossing Others. The Moderating Effect of Managing Others on Work Meaning and Autonomy for the Self-Employed and Employees. (IZA discussion paper 14909), Bonn, 37 S.

    Abstract

    "We examine the moderating role of being a supervisor for meaning and autonomy of self-employed and employed workers. We rely on regression analysis applied after entropy balancing based on a nationally representative dataset of over 80,000 individuals in 30 European countries for 2005, 2010, and 2015. We find that being a self-employed supervisor is correlated with more work meaningfulness and autonomy compared with being a salaried supervisor working for an employer. Wage supervisors and self-employed supervisors experience similar stress levels and have similar earnings, though self- employed supervisors work longer hours. Moreover, solo entrepreneurs experience slightly less work meaningfulness, but more autonomy compared with self-employed supervisors. This may be explained by the fact that solo entrepreneurs earn less but have less stress and shorter working hours than self- employed supervisors." (Author's abstract, IAB-Doku) ((en))

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  • Literaturhinweis

    Crowdwork for Young People: Risks and Opportunities (2021)

    O'Higgins, Niall; Caro, Luis Pinedo;

    Zitatform

    O'Higgins, Niall & Luis Pinedo Caro (2021): Crowdwork for Young People: Risks and Opportunities. (IZA discussion paper 14933), Bonn, 41 S.

    Abstract

    "In recent years, crowdworking has emerged as a small but rapidly growing source of employment and income principally for young(er) people. Here, we build on previous work in identifying the determinants of crowdworkers' earnings. We focus on the reasons why young crowdworkers earn significantly higher hourly wages than their older counterparts. We show that this is due to the higher returns to experience accruing to younger crowd-workers. Educational attainment does not explain this age-based differential, as education is a negligible factor in determining crowdworkers' earnings. We also analyse why young women earn around 20% less than their male counterparts despite blind hiring. We confirm that this is partly explained by constraints on working time faced by women with children. The analysis also shows that 'freely chosen' crowdwork - as opposed to, young people crowd-working because of a lack of alternative employment opportunities - is conducive to higher levels of job satisfaction. Moreover, young crowdworkers in middle income countries earn less than their counterparts in high income countries but report higher levels of job satisfaction. This is entirely attributable to the lower quality of their options outside of crowdwork." (Author's abstract, IAB-Doku) ((en))

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    Inhabiting the Self-Work Romantic Utopia: Positive Psychology, Life Coaching, and the Challenge of Self-Fulfillment at Work (2021)

    Pagis, Michal ;

    Zitatform

    Pagis, Michal (2021): Inhabiting the Self-Work Romantic Utopia: Positive Psychology, Life Coaching, and the Challenge of Self-Fulfillment at Work. In: Work and occupations, Jg. 48, H. 1, S. 40-69. DOI:10.1177/0730888420911683

    Abstract

    "Much has been said about the rise of work as a central identity marker in modern society. With the recent popularization of self-help and positive psychology, this identity marker broadened its signification to include new emotional needs such as love and passion, creating a new cultural imaginary: the “self-work romantic utopia.” Sociological studies have criticized this utopia as a myth that serves capitalist neoliberal structures, leading to frustration and self-blame. However, little is known about how workers themselves confront this myth and the strategies they employ when attempting to inhabit it in today’s precarious job market. Based on 60 in-depth interviews with upper-middle class Israeli workers who hired life coaches to improve their work experience, the author identifies five strategies used to inhabit this romantic utopia: starting over, healing, idealization, polygamy, and vision. Through the analysis of these strategies, the author illustrates how even the relatively privileged workers need to adapt the self-work romantic utopia to their life circumstances, inhabiting the myth in partial degrees. Such flexible implementation turns the “myth” into a cultural tool that directs workers’ lives and actions even in a precarious, unstable job market, maintaining subjective experiences of agency in a sphere characterized by growing structural constraints. Yet paradoxically, these strategies eventually strengthen the precarious, noncommitted, and individual-oriented structure of the job market, yielding flexible, individualistic solutions that replace workplace responsibility." (Author's abstract, IAB-Doku) ((en))

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    How digital technology affects working conditions in globally fragmented production chains: evidence from Europe (2021)

    Parteka, Aleksandra; Wolszczak-Derlacz, Joanna; Nikulin, Dagmara ;

    Zitatform

    Parteka, Aleksandra, Joanna Wolszczak-Derlacz & Dagmara Nikulin (2021): How digital technology affects working conditions in globally fragmented production chains: evidence from Europe. (Working paper series A / GUT Faculty of Management and Economics 66), Gdańsk, 68 S.

    Abstract

    "This paper uses a sample of over 9.5 million workers from 22 European countries to study the intertwined effects of digital technology and cross-border production links on workers' wellbeing. We compare the social effects of technological change exhibited by three types of innovation: computerisation (software), automation (robots) and artificial intelligence (AI). To fully quantify work-related wellbeing, we propose a new methodology that corrects the information on remuneration by reference to such non-monetary factors as the work environment (physical and social), career development prospects, or work intensity. We show that workers' wellbeing depends on the type of technological exposure. Employees in occupations with high software or robots content face worse working conditions than those exposed to AI. The impact of digitalisation on working conditions depends on participation in global production. To demonstrate this, we estimate a set of augmented models for determination of working conditions, interacting technological factors with Global Value Chain participation. GVC intensification is accompanied by deteriorating working conditions - but only in occupations exposed to robots or software, not in AI-intensive jobs. In other words, we find that AI technologies differ from previous waves of technological progress - also in their impact on workers' wellbeing within global production structures." (Author's abstract, IAB-Doku) ((en))

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    The gender-job satisfaction paradox through time and countries (2021)

    Pita, Cristina; Torregrosa, Ramón José;

    Zitatform

    Pita, Cristina & Ramón José Torregrosa (2021): The gender-job satisfaction paradox through time and countries. In: Applied Economics Letters, Jg. 28, H. 12, S. 1000-1005. DOI:10.1080/13504851.2020.1792402

    Abstract

    "Much has been written about the so-called gender-job satisfaction paradox, derived from the fact that a significant number of empirical studies found that women reported higher levels of job satisfaction than their male counterparts, although they had what were considered ‘worse’ jobs in terms of pay and other nonmonetary working conditions. In this article, we use a procedure to compare the relative performance of groups when their achievements are described by distributions of outcomes over an ordered set of categories, the Balanced Worth Vector (BWV), to analyse whether women consistently report to be more satisfied at work than men in different periods of time and countries. The BWV offers a cardinal, complete and transitive evaluation that is based in the likelihood of getting better results. In our setting, the BWV methodology provides a complete ranking of the countries covered by the European Working Conditions Survey according to the relative levels of job satisfaction with working conditions that women and men in each country report. Our results indicate a decreasing gender differential over time and substantial differences across countries, proving that the gender-gap paradox cannot be considered a widespread phenomenon." (Author's abstract, IAB-Doku) ((en))

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    People at Work 2021: A Global Workforce View (2021)

    Richardson, Nela; Klein, Sara;

    Zitatform

    Richardson, Nela & Sara Klein (2021): People at Work 2021: A Global Workforce View. Roseland, 48 S.

    Abstract

    "This report provides a starting point to understand the situation facing employees today across five dimensions of working life: worker confidence and job security; workplace conditions; pay and performance; worker mobility; and gender and family." (Author's abstract, IAB-Doku) ((en))

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    Motivational Drivers of Extensive Work Effort: Are Long Hours Always Detrimental to Well-being? (2020)

    Avgoustaki, Argyro ; Cañibano, Almudena ;

    Zitatform

    Avgoustaki, Argyro & Almudena Cañibano (2020): Motivational Drivers of Extensive Work Effort: Are Long Hours Always Detrimental to Well-being? In: Industrial Relations, Jg. 59, H. 3, S. 355-398. DOI:10.1111/irel.12263

    Abstract

    "Is extensive work effort always detrimental to professionals? well-being? We argue that the link between extensive work effort and well-being depends on the reasons why professionals work extended hours. Drawing on self-determination theory and data from an international consultancy firm, we show that extrinsically driven work effort is negatively related to well-being, while intrinsically driven work effort is positively related to well-being. A reinforcing effect seems to exist between the two types of motivators, revealing that intrinsically driven work effort has both a direct and an indirect link to well-being, mitigating the downsides of extrinsically driven work effort." (Author's abstract, IAB-Doku, Published by arrangement with John Wiley & Sons) ((en))

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    Zum beruflichen Selbstbild und zur Arbeits- und Lebenszufriedenheit im Handwerk in Deutschland (2020)

    Blankenberg, Ann-Kathrin; Binder, Martin;

    Zitatform

    Blankenberg, Ann-Kathrin & Martin Binder (2020): Zum beruflichen Selbstbild und zur Arbeits- und Lebenszufriedenheit im Handwerk in Deutschland. (Göttinger Beiträge zur Handwerksforschung 42), Göttingen, 29 S. DOI:10.3249/2364-3897-gbh-42

    Abstract

    "Die Arbeit im Handwerk unterscheidet sich von vielen anderen Berufen durch Arbeitsmerkmale, die stark prägend für das berufliche Selbstbild sind und außerdem positiv das Wohlbefinden der Arbeitnehmer beeinflussen können. Dazu zählt, dass Handwerker die Ergebnisse ihrer Arbeit sehen können, und sie die Möglichkeit haben, das gesamte Werkstück (und nicht nur einen kleinen Teil davon) eigenständig herzustellen. Dadurch nehmen sie ihre Arbeit als nützlich und sinnstiftend wahr. Angesichts von Untersuchungen, die zeigen, dass Arbeit in manchen Berufszweigen zunehmend als sinnlos empfunden wird, ist es von großer Bedeutung zu verstehen, welche Facetten der Arbeit die Schaffung einer starken beruflichen Identität ermöglichen, die dazu führt, dass Arbeit als sinnvoll und befriedigend erlebt wird. Die Studie hat dieses Forschungsziel und nutzt dafür eine deutschlandweite Umfrage im Handwerkssektor mit rund 2000 Teilnehmern. Der Fokus der Datenerhebung lag dabei darauf, einen Einblick in das berufliche Selbstbild und die Arbeitszufriedenheit der im deutschen Handwerk Beschäftigten zu erhalten. Diese zeichnen sich in der Befragung durch ein stark ausgeprägtes berufliches Selbstbild aus und identifizieren sich stark mit ihrer handwerklichen Tätigkeit. Dabei weisen Beschäftigte im Handwerk eine hohe Arbeitszufriedenheit auf. Die Arbeitszufriedenheit kann in Teilen mit der Ganzheitlichkeit der Arbeit, dem Fokus auf manuelle Tätigkeit, der Wahrnehmung der Sinnhaftigkeit der Tätigkeit sowie einer hohen wahrgenommenen Autonomie in Zusammenhang gebracht werden." (Autorenreferat, IAB-Doku)

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    Generation Z: A comparative study of the expectations of Gen Z and the perception of employers (2020)

    Böhlich, Susanne; Axmann, Richard;

    Zitatform

    Böhlich, Susanne & Richard Axmann (2020): Generation Z: A comparative study of the expectations of Gen Z and the perception of employers. (IUBH discussion papers - Business & Management 2020,01), Erfurt, 15 S.

    Abstract

    "Employers currently encounter more and more members of Generation Z - who finished their school as well as university education - without knowing exactly what this generation wishes and needs. This paper verifies current assumptions about Generation Z with a quantitative study in Germany, consisting of two parts. As a first step, members of Generation Z (n = 103) were queried upon their work attitudes while in a second step, company representatives (n = 48) were asked about their assumptions on the adolescents' preferences. Thus, not only conclusions on young adults could be drawn, but also on the (lack of) knowledge about Generation Z of their employers. The prior assumption that the young generation would be difficult to employ inter alia due to their refusal of a work-life blending, lacking career orientation, and inability to take feedback could not be supported. In fact, Generation Z seems to be committed as well as motivated to work for their professional success. Employers showed a decent understanding of their young employees, though there seem to be a couple of misapprehensions." (Author's abstract, IAB-Doku) ((en))

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    Returns to job satisfaction in the presence of horizontal mismatch (2020)

    Ge, Qi; Jordan, Eun Jung; Shen, Leilei; Kim, Myongjin;

    Zitatform

    Ge, Qi, Eun Jung Jordan, Myongjin Kim & Leilei Shen (2020): Returns to job satisfaction in the presence of horizontal mismatch. In: Applied Economics, Jg. 52, H. 27, S. 2913-2930. DOI:10.1080/00036846.2019.1696941

    Abstract

    "In this paper, we study the relationship among horizontal mismatch, job satisfaction and wages using data from the 2013 Scientists and Engineers Statistical Data System (SESTAT). Estimates from 2SLS indicate that 1) field-occupation match in the highest degree has a positive effect on job satisfaction and wages; and 2) controlling for field-occupation matches, job satisfaction has a positive but diminishing effect on wages with a large heterogeneity across different age groups. In addition, we also distinguish between job satisfaction arising from benefits and job satisfaction that is productivity enhancing and find both to have a positive but nonlinear effect on wages." (Author's abstract, IAB-Doku) ((en))

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    The Ambivalent Appraisal of Job Demands and the Moderating Role of Job Control and Social Support for Burnout and Job Satisfaction (2020)

    Gerich, Joachim ; Weber, Christoph;

    Zitatform

    Gerich, Joachim & Christoph Weber (2020): The Ambivalent Appraisal of Job Demands and the Moderating Role of Job Control and Social Support for Burnout and Job Satisfaction. In: Social indicators research, Jg. 148, H. 1, S. 251-280. DOI:10.1007/s11205-019-02195-9

    Abstract

    "Within an extended challenge–hindrance framework, it is assumed that job demands are subjectively appraised both as challenges (that is, as working conditions that are associated with potential personal gains) and hindrances (as working conditions associated with constrains) at the same time. In accordance with transactional stress theory, the association between demand intensity and work-related attitudes (work satisfaction) and psychological strain (burnout) is expected to be mediated by individual appraisal. Moreover, because curvilinear relationships between demand and challenge and hindrance appraisals are assumed, and appraisal is expected to be moderated by job control and social support, we tested complex nonlinear moderated mediation models for four types of job demands (task difficulty, time pressure, interruptions, and responsibility). Based on cross-sectional data of a heterogeneous sample of employees, we confirmed simultaneous challenge and hindrance appraisals. Challenge components are positively associated and hindrance components are negatively associated with favorable outcomes (higher work satisfaction and lower burnout). Challenge appraisals are found to be more relevant for work satisfaction, while hindrance appraisals are more relevant for burnout. The relationship between demand intensity and challenge appraisal is confirmed as curvilinear, whereas hindrance appraisals are approximately linearly related to demand intensity. The relationship between demand intensity and outcome variables is partly mediated by challenge and hindrance appraisal, and significant interaction effects suggest that the appraisal process is moderated by job control and social support." (Author's abstract, IAB-Doku, © Springer-Verlag) ((en))

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    Birds of a feather flock together: How congruence between worker and occupational personality relates to job satisfaction over time (2020)

    Ghetta, Anja ; Herrmann, Anne; Rossier, Jérôme ; Hirschi, Andreas ; Wang, Mo ;

    Zitatform

    Ghetta, Anja, Andreas Hirschi, Mo Wang, Jérôme Rossier & Anne Herrmann (2020): Birds of a feather flock together: How congruence between worker and occupational personality relates to job satisfaction over time. In: Journal of vocational behavior, Jg. 119. DOI:10.1016/j.jvb.2020.103412

    Abstract

    "Person–environment fit (P–E fit) and job satisfaction are key constructs in vocational and organizational research. Research established that they are positively related, but little is known about how they relate over time. We analyzed P–E fit as the congruence between the Big Five personality traits of a worker and of all job incumbents in the same occupation, and how this congruence relates to job satisfaction over time. Analyses were based on 7049 participants from the German Socio-Economic Panel from 2005, 2009, and 2013. We used latent change score modeling to assess changes in congruence and job satisfaction over eight years, and further created 3D response surface plots based on polynomial regression to investigate nonlinear relations between each Big Five trait and job satisfaction. Change in P–E fit was not related to simultaneous change in job satisfaction and did not predict subsequent change in job satisfaction. The surface analyses indicated that a worker's and an occupation's personality are primarily independently relevant for the level of job satisfaction and that effects differ for different personality traits." (Author's abstract, IAB-Doku, © 2020 Elsevier) ((en))

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    Unions and Workers' Well-being (2020)

    Goerke, Laszlo ;

    Zitatform

    Goerke, Laszlo (2020): Unions and Workers' Well-being. (GLO discussion paper / Global Labor Organization 726), Essen, 25 S.

    Abstract

    "If individuals join a trade union their utility should increase. Therefore, union members can be expected to exhibit higher job satisfaction than comparable non-members. This expectation is not consistent with empirical findings. The evidence sometimes indicates that union members have lower job satisfaction, but overall suggests the absence of a robust correlation. This survey discusses empirically relevant determinants of the relationship between trade union membership and job satisfaction. It distinguishes settings in which a trade union provides public goods from those in which it restricts the provision of benefits to its members. Furthermore, the survey summarizes the empirical evidence and indicates possible future research issues." (Author's abstract, IAB-Doku) ((en))

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    The Role of Employees' Age for the Relation between Job Autonomy and Sickness Absence (2020)

    Grund, Christian ; Rubin, Maike;

    Zitatform

    Grund, Christian & Maike Rubin (2020): The Role of Employees' Age for the Relation between Job Autonomy and Sickness Absence. (IZA discussion paper 13945), Bonn, 27 S.

    Abstract

    "We investigate whether job autonomy is associated with employees' sickness absence. We can make use of the representative German Study of Mental Health at Work data. In line with our theoretical considerations, we do find evidence for an inverse relation between employees' job autonomy and days of sickness absence. This relation is only weakly mediated by job satisfaction and particularly relevant for more senior employees." (Author's abstract, IAB-Doku) ((en))

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    Income Support, Employment Transitions and Well-Being (2020)

    Hetschko, Clemens ; Wolf, Tobias ; Schöb, Ronnie ;

    Zitatform

    Hetschko, Clemens, Ronnie Schöb & Tobias Wolf (2020): Income Support, Employment Transitions and Well-Being. In: Labour Economics, Jg. 66, 2020-07-14. DOI:10.1016/j.labeco.2020.101887

    Abstract

    "Using specific panel data of German welfare benefit recipients, we investigate the non-pecuniary life satisfaction effects of in-work benefits. Our empirical strategy combines difference-in-difference designs with synthetic control groups to analyse transitions of workers between unemployment, regular employment and employment accompanied by welfare receipt. Working makes people generally better off than being unemployed but employed welfare recipients do not reach the life satisfaction level of regular employees. This implies that welfare receipt entails non-compliance with the norm to make one's own living. Our findings allow us to draw cautious conclusions on employment subsidies paid as welfare benefits." (Author's abstract, IAB-Doku, © 2020 Elsevier) ((en))

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    What Makes Work Meaningful and Why Economists Should Care about It (2020)

    Nikolova, Milena ; Cnossen, Femke ;

    Zitatform

    Nikolova, Milena & Femke Cnossen (2020): What Makes Work Meaningful and Why Economists Should Care about It. (IZA discussion paper 13112), Bonn, 31 S.

    Abstract

    "We demonstrate why meaningful work, i.e. job-related activities that individuals view as purposeful and worthwhile, matters to labour economists. Building on self-determination theory, which specifies the roles of autonomy, competence, and relatedness as preconditions for motivation, we are the first to explore the determinants of work meaningfulness. Specifically, using three waves of the European Working Conditions Survey, we show that autonomy, competence, and relatedness explain about 60 percent of the variation in work meaningfulness perceptions. Meanwhile, extrinsic factors, such as income, benefits, and performance pay, are relatively unimportant. Meaningful work also predicts absenteeism, skills training, and retirement intentions, which highlights the concept’s economic significance. We provide new insights that could help organise the future of work in a meaningful and dignifying way and propose concrete avenues for future research on meaningful work in economics." (Author's abstract, IAB-Doku) ((en))

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    Incongruity between Work and Gender Roles: The Effects of Gender Stereotype Deviation on Job Satisfaction (2020)

    Otten, Sina; Alewell, Dorothea;

    Zitatform

    Otten, Sina & Dorothea Alewell (2020): Incongruity between Work and Gender Roles: The Effects of Gender Stereotype Deviation on Job Satisfaction. In: Management revue, Jg. 31, H. 2, S. 206-231. DOI:10.5771/0935-9915-2020-2-206

    Abstract

    "We analyze the effects of deviation from gender stereotypes on job satisfaction for male and female employees in general and for employees in leadership positions. Based on social role theory, backlash mechanisms owing to the violation of gender norms and role incongruity theory, we expect that deviating from gender stereotypes negatively affects job satisfaction. We test our hypotheses by hierarchically applying multiple linear regressions to German employee data. Results show a stable negative effect of deviation from gender stereotypes on job satisfaction for women only. Our findings are consistent with recent studies that confirm traditional gender structures on the labor market and expand our knowledge about backlash effects, since they indicate that deviation from gender norms not only affects objective career indicators but also subjective ones. As job satisfaction is a predictor of organizational success, we discuss ways for organizations to reduce the harmful effects of persistent traditional gender stereotypes in workplaces." (Author's abstract, IAB-Doku) ((en))

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    Explaining the gender gap in job satisfaction (2020)

    Redmond, Paul; McGuinness, Seamus ;

    Zitatform

    Redmond, Paul & Seamus McGuinness (2020): Explaining the gender gap in job satisfaction. In: Applied Economics Letters, Jg. 27, H. 17, S. 1415-1418. DOI:10.1080/13504851.2019.1686111

    Abstract

    "In general, women report greater job satisfaction than men. The existing literature cannot fully explain the nature of this difference, as the gap tends to persist even when controlling for job characteristics. In this paper, we study job satisfaction using recent data for 28 EU countries. Women, on average, are more satisfied than men and the gap remains even when we account for a wide range of personal, job and family characteristics. However, the gap disappears when we include job preferences, as women place greater importance on work-life balance and the intrinsic desirability of the work." (Author's abstract, IAB-Doku) ((en))

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    "We're Worth What We Are Paid": Unravelling the "Paradox of the Contented Female Worker" (2020)

    Smith, Maria;

    Zitatform

    Smith, Maria (2020): "We're Worth What We Are Paid": Unravelling the "Paradox of the Contented Female Worker". In: Sociological research online, Jg. 25, H. 3, S. 317-332. DOI:10.1177/1360780419870809

    Abstract

    "Pay satisfaction research has suggested that women are more satisfied with their pay than men, even though, in general, women earn less. This article argues that this body of research has misconceptualised this phenomenon as an issue of women only. It also argues that previous explanations for this gender pay paradox have not adequately explained these patterns of satisfaction. A social constructionist approach to pay satisfaction is proposed which situates satisfaction within the context of structural inequality. This draws upon the scholarly work of feminist scholars and the conceptual ideas of Pierre Bourdieu. This theoretical approach is explored with data from qualitative interviews with support staff at universities in the United Kingdom. This evidence suggests that their pay satisfaction is influenced by beliefs about the “value” of different occupations." (Author's abstract, IAB-Doku) ((en))

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    Ungrateful slaves? An examination of job quality and job satisfaction for male part-time workers in the UK (2020)

    Warren, Tracey ; Lyonette, Clare ;

    Zitatform

    Warren, Tracey & Clare Lyonette (2020): Ungrateful slaves? An examination of job quality and job satisfaction for male part-time workers in the UK. In: The British journal of sociology, Jg. 71, H. 2, S. 382-402. DOI:10.1111/1468-4446.12741

    Abstract

    "Research on part-time work has concentrated over many decades on the experiences of women but male part-time employment is growing in the UK. This article addresses two sizable gaps in knowledge concerning male part-timers: are men's part-time jobs of lower quality than men's full-time jobs? Are male part-timers more or less job-satisfied compared to their full-time peers? A fundamental part of both interrogations is whether men's part-time employment varies by occupational class. The article is motivated by the large body of work on female part-timers. Its theoretical framework is rooted in one of the most controversial discussions in the sociology of women workers: the “grateful slave” debate that emerged in the 1990s when researchers sought to explain why so many women expressed job satisfaction with low-quality part-time jobs. Innovatively, this article draws upon those contentious ideas to provide new insights into male, rather than female, part-time employment. Based upon analysis of a large quantitative data set, the results provide clear evidence of low-quality male part-time employment in the UK, when compared with men's full-time jobs. Men working part-time also express deteriorating satisfaction with jobs overall and in several specific dimensions of their jobs. Male part-timers in lower occupational class positions retain a clear “lead” both in bad job quality and low satisfaction. The article asks whether decreasingly satisfied male part-time workers should be termed “ungrateful slaves?” It unpacks the “grateful slave” metaphor and, after doing so, rejects its value for the ongoing analysis of part-time jobs in the formal labor market." (Author's abstract, IAB-Doku, Published by arrangement with John Wiley & Sons) ((en))

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    How's life? 2020: measuring well-being (2020)

    Zitatform

    OECD (2020): How's life? 2020. Measuring well-being. (How's life? 05), Paris, 244 S. DOI:10.1787/9870c393-en

    Weiterführende Informationen

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    Implications of work effort and discretion for employee well-being and career-related outcomes: An integrative assessment (2019)

    Avgoustaki, Argyro ; Ffrankort, Hans T. W.;

    Zitatform

    Avgoustaki, Argyro & Hans T. W. Ffrankort (2019): Implications of work effort and discretion for employee well-being and career-related outcomes. An integrative assessment. In: ILR review, Jg. 72, H. 3, S. 636-661. DOI:10.1177/0019793918804540

    Abstract

    "How does work effort affect employee outcomes? The authors bridge distinct literatures on the well-being versus career-related implications of work effort by analyzing the relation of overtime work and work intensity to both types of outcomes. They also extend examination of the role of discretion in modifying the effects of work effort from well-being to career-related outcomes. Using data from the fifth and sixth European Working Conditions Surveys, the authors show that greater work effort relates strongly to reduced well-being and modestly to inferior career-related outcomes, while discretion may attenuate these adverse implications. Even with discretion, work intensity generally is a stronger predictor of unfavorable outcomes than is overtime work. Implications include the need for employees to become aware of the broader limitations of excessive work effort, for employers to give discretion when viable, and for public policy to devise strategies that help limit the adverse consequences of work intensity." (Author's abstract, IAB-Doku) ((en))

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    Does employee happiness have an impact on productivity? (2019)

    Bellet, Clément S.; De Neve, Jan-Emmanuel; Ward, George;

    Zitatform

    Bellet, Clément S., Jan-Emmanuel De Neve & George Ward (2019): Does employee happiness have an impact on productivity? (CEP discussion paper 1655), London, 48 S.

    Abstract

    "This article provides quasi-experimental evidence on the relationship between employee happiness and productivity in the field. We study the universe of call center sales workers at British Telecom (BT), one of the United Kingdom's largest private employers. We measure their happiness over a 6- month period using a novel weekly survey instrument, and link these reports with highly detailed administrative data on workplace behaviors and various measures of employee performance. We show that workers make around 13% more sales in weeks where they report being happy compared to weeks when they are unhappy. Exploiting exogenous variation in employee happiness arising from weather shocks local to each of the 11 call centers, we document a strong causal effect of happiness on labor productivity. These effects are driven by workers making more calls per hour, adhering more closely to their workflow schedule, and converting more calls into sales when they are happier. No effects are found in our setting of happiness on various measures of high-frequency labor supply such as attendance and break taking." (Author's abstract, IAB-Doku) ((en))

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    Sinnstiftendes Management: Welche Faktoren das Sinnerleben der Mitarbeiter beeinflussen (2019)

    Busse, Ronald;

    Zitatform

    Busse, Ronald (2019): Sinnstiftendes Management. Welche Faktoren das Sinnerleben der Mitarbeiter beeinflussen. In: Zeitschrift Führung und Organisation, Jg. 88, H. 2, S. 130-138.

    Abstract

    "Extrinsische Anreize sind weit verbreitet, haben aber meistens nur einen kurzfristigen Motivationseffekt. Der Frage, welche organisationalen Bedingungen bereitgestellt werden müssen, damit Mitarbeiter intrinsisch motiviert sind, wird in diesem Beitrag nachgegangen. Dabei wird die Methode des vernetzten Denkens nach Frederic Vester angewandt." (Autorenreferat, © 2019 Schäffer-Poeschel Verlag für Wirtschaft - Steuern - Recht GmbH, Stuttgart)

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    On the merit of equal pay: Performance manipulation and incentive setting (2019)

    Corgnet, Brice ; Sutan, Angela; Martin, Ludivine ; Ndodjang, Peguy;

    Zitatform

    Corgnet, Brice, Ludivine Martin, Peguy Ndodjang & Angela Sutan (2019): On the merit of equal pay: Performance manipulation and incentive setting. In: European Economic Review, Jg. 113, H. April, S. 23-45. DOI:10.1016/j.euroecorev.2018.12.006

    Abstract

    "Work performance is often difficult to assess thus leaving room for manipulation of commonly-used metrics. We created a laboratory workplace in which we can precisely assess both work performance along with manipulation activities. Using two independent experiments we show that, whenever pay for performance is used, manipulation is pervasive leading to both a waste of organizational resources and a weakening of incentives. By contrast, paying organizational members equally effectively deters manipulation attempts leading to higher organizational production." (Author's abstract, © 2019 Elsevier) ((en))

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    Job satisfaction and self-selection into the public or private sector: Evidence from a natural experiment (2019)

    Danzer, Natalia ;

    Zitatform

    Danzer, Natalia (2019): Job satisfaction and self-selection into the public or private sector. Evidence from a natural experiment. In: Labour economics, Jg. 57, H. April, S. 46-62. DOI:10.1016/j.labeco.2019.01.002

    Abstract

    "Are public sector jobs better than private sector jobs? To answer this question, this paper investigates observed differences in job satisfaction between public- and private-sector workers and disentangles the effect of worker sorting from the one caused by sector-specific job characteristics. A natural experiment - the massive privatization process in post-Soviet countries - allows correcting potential self-selection bias in a unique and nationally representative Ukrainian survey for the years 2003 to 2007. Unanticipated industry-specific privatization probabilities are assigned to workers based on retrospective information on their personal jobs held during Soviet times - well in advance of the onset of the privatization process and the emergence of a private sector. The results reveal a causal public-sector satisfaction premium and suggest a negative selection of individuals into the public sector. Part of the public-private satisfaction gap can be explained by the different availability of fringe benefits in the two sectors." (Author's abstract, © 2019 Elsevier) ((en))

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    Socially useless jobs (2019)

    Dur, Robert ; Lent, Max van;

    Zitatform

    Dur, Robert & Max van Lent (2019): Socially useless jobs. In: Industrial relations, Jg. 58, H. 1, S. 3-16. DOI:10.1111/irel.12227

    Abstract

    "Recent research suggests that many workers in modern economies think that their job is socially useless, i.e., that it makes no or a negative contribution to society. However, the evidence so far is mainly anecdotal. We use a representative dataset comprising 100,000 workers from forty-seven countries at four points in time. We find that approximately 8 percent of workers perceive their job as socially useless, while another 17 percent are doubtful about the usefulness of their job. There are sizeable differences among countries, sectors, occupations, and age groups, but no trend over time. A vast majority of workers cares about holding a socially useful job and we find that they suffer when they consider their job useless. We also explore possible causes of socially useless jobs, including bad management, strict job protection legislation, harmful economic activities, labor hoarding, and division of labor." (Author's abstract, Published by arrangement with John Wiley & Sons) ((en))

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    Discretionary bonuses and turnover (2019)

    Ekinci, Emre;

    Zitatform

    Ekinci, Emre (2019): Discretionary bonuses and turnover. In: Labour economics, Jg. 60, H. October, S. 30-49. DOI:10.1016/j.labeco.2019.05.003

    Abstract

    "This paper develops a signaling model to investigate the effects of discretionary bonuses and wage increases on turnover. When the worker's output is not contractible and the firm privately learns about the match quality between the firm and the worker, bonus payments and wage increases can convey the firm's private information to the worker. If the firm credibly communicates favorable information about the match quality to a worker, the worker develops higher expectations concerning her career outcomes at the firm (such as future wage increases and promotions) and, consequently, becomes less likely to separate. The analysis demonstrates that although a wage increase and a bonus reflect the same information regarding the match quality, each serves a distinctly different role in terms of the worker's turnover decision. Specifically, the firm pays bonuses to signal a good match while using wages to respond to competing offers the worker receives. The model yields testable predictions that concern how bonuses are related to wage increases and promotions and how bonuses and wage increases are related to turnover. The empirical analysis based on the data constructed from the personnel records of a large firm in the financial services industry provides support for the model's implications." (Author's abstract, © 2019 Elsevier) ((en))

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    The determinants of skills use and work pressure: a longitudinal analysis (2019)

    Felstead, Alan; Gallie, Duncan; Henseke, Golo ; Green, Francis ;

    Zitatform

    Felstead, Alan, Duncan Gallie, Francis Green & Golo Henseke (2019): The determinants of skills use and work pressure. A longitudinal analysis. In: Economic and Industrial Democracy, Jg. 40, H. 3, S. 730-754. DOI:10.1177/0143831X16656412

    Abstract

    "Employers, workers and governments all have a stake in improving intrinsic job quality since it can help to raise worker well-being and lower the social costs of ill-health. This article provides a unique insight into factors triggering changes to two key aspects of intrinsic job quality - the skills used and developed at work, and the pressures under which work is carried out. Using a rare two-wave panel dataset, the article assesses whether three predicted determinants - namely employee involvement, teamworking and computerisation - are good or bad for these aspects of intrinsic job quality." (Author's abstract, IAB-Doku) ((en))

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    Types of institutions and well-being of self-employed and paid employees in Europe (2019)

    Fritsch, Michael ; Wyrwich, Michael ; Sorgner, Alina ;

    Zitatform

    Fritsch, Michael, Alina Sorgner & Michael Wyrwich (2019): Types of institutions and well-being of self-employed and paid employees in Europe. (IZA discussion paper 12336), Bonn, 43 S.

    Abstract

    "This paper analyzes the role of different types of institutions, such as entrepreneurshipfacilitating entry conditions, labor market regulations, quality of government, and perception of corruption for individual well-being among self-employed and paid employed individuals. Well-being is operationalized by job and life satisfaction of individuals in 32 European countries measured by data from EU Statistics on Income and Living Conditions (EU-SILC). We find that institutions never affected both occupational groups in opposite ways. Our findings indicate that labor market institutions do not play an important role well-being. The results suggest that fostering an entrepreneurial society in Europe is a welfare enhancing strategy that benefits both, the self-employed and paid employees." (Author's abstract, IAB-Doku) ((en))

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    The role of job satisfaction and local labor market conditions for the dissolution of worker-job matches (2019)

    Hinz, Tina ; Lechmann Daniel S. J., ;

    Zitatform

    Hinz, Tina (2019): The role of job satisfaction and local labor market conditions for the dissolution of worker-job matches. (Universität Erlangen, Nürnberg, Lehrstuhl für Arbeitsmarkt- und Regionalpolitik. Diskussionspapiere 109), Erlangen, 27 S.

    Abstract

    "Der Artikel untersucht den Zusammenhang von Arbeitszufriedenheit und der Auflösung von Arbeitsverhältnissen. Wir verwenden Daten des Sozioökonomischen Panels (SOEP) für Deutschland und schätzen multinomiale Logitmodelle mit zufälligen Effekten, um die Wahrscheinlichkeit der Auflösung eines Arbeitsverhältnisses zu untersuchen. In Übereinstimmung mit der Literatur finden wir einen negativen Zusammenhang zwischen der Arbeitszufriedenheit und der Auflösung eines Arbeitsverhältnisses. Wir zeigen, dass dieser Zusammenhang vollständig durch weniger zufriedene Individuen verursacht wird, da die Auflösungswahrscheinlichkeit bei zufriedeneren Arbeitnehmern nicht mit deren Arbeitszufriedenheit variiert. Allerdings verharren selbst die meisten der sehr unzufriedenen Arbeitnehmer in deren aktuellen Arbeitsverhältnissen. Wir zeigen, dass der Effekt der Arbeitszufriedenheit auf die Auflösung des Arbeitsverhältnisses sowohl mit den regionalen Arbeitsmarktbedingungen als auch mit der Art der Auflösung (Wechsel in anderes Beschäftigungsverhältnis oder in Nichterwerbstätigkeit) zusammenhängt." (Autorenreferat, IAB-Doku)

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    Arbeitszufriedenheit als soziales Problemlösen (2019)

    Jochims, Thorsten;

    Zitatform

    Jochims, Thorsten (2019): Arbeitszufriedenheit als soziales Problemlösen. In: Arbeit. Zeitschrift für Arbeitsforschung, Arbeitsgestaltung und Arbeitspolitik, Jg. 28, H. 2, S. 177-204. DOI:10.1515/arbeit-2019-0011

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    Gratifikation und Befindlichkeit - Ein Berufsgruppenvergleich von verbeamteten Lehrkräften, Angestellten im öffentlichen Dienst und Erwerbstätigen in Wirtschaftsunternehmen (2019)

    Kiel, Ewald; Braun, Annika; Hillert, Andreas; Bäcker, Klaus; Weiß, Sabine;

    Zitatform

    Kiel, Ewald, Annika Braun, Andreas Hillert, Klaus Bäcker & Sabine Weiß (2019): Gratifikation und Befindlichkeit - Ein Berufsgruppenvergleich von verbeamteten Lehrkräften, Angestellten im öffentlichen Dienst und Erwerbstätigen in Wirtschaftsunternehmen. In: Zeitschrift für Arbeitswissenschaft, Jg. 73, H. 3, S. 324-336. DOI:10.1007/s41449-019-00159-w

    Abstract

    "Die vorliegende Studie untersucht die Befindlichkeit und das Erleben von beruflicher Verausgabung und Gratifikation in einem Berufsgruppenvergleich mit verbeamteten Lehrkräften sowie Angestellten im öffentlichen Dienst und in Wirtschaftsunternehmen. Mittels eines Online-Verfahrens wurden insgesamt 24.516 Erwerbstätige der genannten Berufsgruppen zu Symptomen von Depressivität, Ängstlichkeit und Stress befragt, erhoben durch die Depressions-Angst-Stress-Skalen (DASS). Die Wahrnehmung von beruflicher Verausgabung und Gratifikation erfolgte durch die Skalen zur Effort-Reward-Imbalance von Siegrist. Ein zentrales Ergebnis ist, dass Depressivitäts-, Ängstlichkeits- und Stresssymptome mit der Art des Arbeitsverhältnisses in Bezug stehen: Angestellte in Unternehmen gefolgt von denen im öffentlichen Dienst zeigen die höchsten Werte in den DASS-Skalen und berichten zudem von einem geringeren Gratifikationserleben. Lehrkräfte erweisen sich als die Berufsgruppe mit der insgesamt günstigsten Einschätzung. Berufliche Sicherheit stellt sich hier als protektiver Faktor heraus, zusätzlich berichten Lehrkräfte von der höchsten Anerkennung durch Kollegen und Vorgesetzte.<br> Praktische Relevanz: Die abgeleiteten Maßnahmen sind explizit auf die Bedürfnisse der unterschiedlichen Erwerbstätigengruppen zugeschnitten. Bei im öffentlichen Dienst tätigen Personen sind immaterielle Gratifikationen bedeutsam, es sind beispielsweise institutionelle Formen der Rückmeldung zu etablieren, die Vorgesetzte für wertschätzende Kommunikation sensibilisieren. Für angestellte Mitarbeiter wären neben Maßnahmen der betrieblichen Gesundheitsfürsorge langfristige Beschäftigungsperspektiven zielführend, deren Bedeutung für die Befindlichkeit sichtbar wird." (Autorenreferat)

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    The Underemployment-Job Satisfaction Nexus: A Study of Part-Time Employment in Australia (2019)

    Kifle, T.; Kler, P.; Shankar, S.;

    Zitatform

    Kifle, T., P. Kler & S. Shankar (2019): The Underemployment-Job Satisfaction Nexus. A Study of Part-Time Employment in Australia. In: Social indicators research, Jg. 143, H. 1, S. 233-249. DOI:10.1007/s11205-018-1976-2

    Abstract

    "This study investigates the association between underemployment and job satisfaction among part-time workers across the period 2002-2014, given that both are increasingly important phenomena within the Australian labour market, and currently under-researched. We delve deeper into this nexus by extending the focus of job satisfaction beyond overall job satisfaction, including another five workplace satisfaction domains. This is done to see if the association is sensitive to specific aspects of work. We find that being underemployed is negatively associated with job satisfaction, across all workplace satisfaction domains. Further, we find that the underemployment-job satisfaction nexus to be somewhat gendered. Specifically, we report that underemployed males have a greater negative association with job satisfaction relative to their female peers. These results suggest that part-time underemployment is a significant (amounting to around 94% of the entire underemployed people in Australia) but well-hidden issue within the Australian labour market, and the consequence of this for job satisfaction are pronounced." (Author's abstract, IAB-Doku, © Springer-Verlag) ((en))

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    Pflege: Was jetzt zu tun ist (2019)

    Kock, Katharina; Krauss-Hoffmann, Peter; Polzer-Baakes, Christin;

    Zitatform

    Kock, Katharina, Peter Krauss-Hoffmann & Christin Polzer-Baakes (2019): Pflege: Was jetzt zu tun ist. In: Gute Arbeit, Jg. 31, H. 4, S. 30-32.

    Abstract

    "In Pflegeberufen bis zur Rente arbeiten? Für etwa die Hälfte der Beschäftigten ist das nicht denkbar. Ergebnisse einer Beschäftigtenbefragung in NRW zeigen Handlungsbedarfe auf." (Autorenreferat, IAB-Doku)

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    Arbeitszufriedenheit in der modernen Arbeitswelt (2019)

    Krause-Pilatus, Annabelle; Rinne, Ulf; Schneider, Hilmar;

    Zitatform

    Krause-Pilatus, Annabelle, Ulf Rinne & Hilmar Schneider (2019): Arbeitszufriedenheit in der modernen Arbeitswelt. (IZA Standpunkte 94), Bonn, 17 S.

    Abstract

    "Der fortschreitende Wandel der Arbeitswelt zeichnet sich durch steigende Flexibilitätsanforderungen und ein höheres Maß an eigenverantwortlichem Handeln aus. Verantwortung, Flexibilität und neue Freiräume im Job werden auch von vielen Erwerbstätigen geschätzt - aber nicht von allen. Der vorliegende Beitrag zeigt, dass die Arbeitszufriedenheit nicht allein mit den Eigenschaften des Arbeitsplatzes zusammenhängt, sondern auch damit, wie sehr diese Eigenschaften den Präferenzen des jeweiligen Arbeitnehmers entsprechen. Beschäftigte mit wenig Flexibilität und Eigenverantwortung können somit grundsätzlich genauso zufrieden mit ihrer Arbeit sein wie Arbeitnehmer mit viel Flexibilität und Eigenverantwortung." (Autorenreferat, IAB-Doku)

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    Employee wellbeing, productivity and firm performance (2019)

    Krekel, Christian; Ward, George; De Neve, Jan-Emmanuel;

    Zitatform

    Krekel, Christian, George Ward & Jan-Emmanuel De Neve (2019): Employee wellbeing, productivity and firm performance. (CEP discussion paper 1605), London, 43 S.

    Abstract

    "Does higher employee wellbeing lead to higher productivity, and, ultimately, to tangible benefits to the bottom line of businesses? We survey the evidence and study this question in a meta-analysis of 339 independent research studies, including the wellbeing of 1,882,131 employees and the performance of 82,248 business units, originating from 230 independent organisations across 49 industries in the Gallup client database. We find a significant, strong positive correlation between employees' satisfaction with their company and employee productivity and customer loyalty, and a strong negative correlation with staff turnover. Ultimately, higher wellbeing at work is positively correlated with more business-unit level profitability." (Author's abstract, IAB-Doku) ((en))

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    The effects of flexible work practices on employee attitudes: evidence from a large-scale panel study in Germany (2019)

    Kröll, Claudia; Nüesch, Stephan;

    Zitatform

    Kröll, Claudia & Stephan Nüesch (2019): The effects of flexible work practices on employee attitudes. Evidence from a large-scale panel study in Germany. In: The international journal of human resource management, Jg. 30, H. 9, S. 1505-1525. DOI:10.1080/09585192.2017.1289548

    Abstract

    "We explore the effects of flexible work practices (FWPs) on the work attitudes (job satisfaction and turnover intention) and non-work attitudes (leisure satisfaction and perceived health) of employees based on representative large-scale German panel data. Because unobserved individual characteristics can easily act as confounders, we estimate both pooled ordinary least squares models and individual fixed-effects models. Controlling for time-constant individual heterogeneity, we find that the three considered FWPs - flexitime, sabbaticals, and working from home - significantly increase job satisfaction and that sabbaticals and working from home (but not flexitime) significantly decrease turnover intention. In addition, sabbaticals but not flexitime or working from home significantly increase leisure satisfaction. The effects of FWPs on health are mostly weak and statistically insignificant. Models that do not control for such individual heterogeneity either underestimate the positive effects of FWPs or find detrimental effects. Our findings indicate that organizations in Germany can increase job satisfaction and decrease employee turnover intention by offering FWPs." (Author's abstract, IAB-Doku) ((en))

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    Helping with the kids? How family-friedly workplaces affect parental well-being and behavior (2019)

    Lauber, Verena; Storck, Johanna;

    Zitatform

    Lauber, Verena & Johanna Storck (2019): Helping with the kids? How family-friedly workplaces affect parental well-being and behavior. In: Oxford economic papers, Jg. 71, H. 1, S. 95-118. DOI:10.1093/oep/gpy062

    Abstract

    "Despite political efforts, balancing work and family life is still challenging. This paper provides novel evidence on the effect of firm level interventions that seek to reduce the work - life conflict. The focus is on how childcare support affects the well-being, working time, and caring behaviour of mothers with young children. Since the mid-2000s and pushed by public policies, in Germany an increasing number of employers have become proactive and implemented more family-friendly workplaces. These changes over time allow us to suggest causal effects using a difference-in-differences-matching approach. Based on a large panel data set, we find evidence pointing to welfare enhancing effects of childcare support. Mothers who are likely to be constrained in their allocation of time especially increase their working time and use formal care more intensively. The rise in satisfaction levels is more pronounced if mothers are more career-orientated." (Author's abstract, IAB-Doku) ((en))

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    The shorter workweek and worker wellbeing: Evidence from Portugal and France (2019)

    Lepinteur, Anthony ;

    Zitatform

    Lepinteur, Anthony (2019): The shorter workweek and worker wellbeing. Evidence from Portugal and France. In: Labour economics, Jg. 58, H. June, S. 204-220. DOI:10.1016/j.labeco.2018.05.010

    Abstract

    "Using data from the European Community Household Panel, this paper evaluates the impact of the exogenous reductions in weekly working hours induced by reforms implemented in Portugal and France on worker wellbeing. Difference-in-differences estimation results suggest that reduced working hours generated significant and robust increases in job and leisure satisfaction of the workers affected in both countries (from 0.07 to 0.15 standard deviation increases), with the rise in the former mainly being explained by greater satisfaction with working hours and working conditions. Further results suggest that staff representative bodies are important for ensuring that working-time reductions lead to welfare gains." (Author's abstract, © 2019 Elsevier) ((en))

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    Job satisfaction and bad jobs: Why are cleaners so happy at work? (2019)

    Léné, Alexandre;

    Zitatform

    Léné, Alexandre (2019): Job satisfaction and bad jobs: Why are cleaners so happy at work? In: Work, employment and society, Jg. 33, H. 4, S. 666-681. DOI:10.1177/0950017019828904

    Abstract

    "Our analysis is based on the French DARES Working Conditions survey which contains a very large sample of individuals representative of the French working population. We demonstrate that employees working in the cleaning sector report significantly higher levels of satisfaction than the other employees. This statistical result is robust; it persists when we introduce a large number of control variables. This result is puzzling insofar as it is generally agreed that these workers hold 'poor quality' jobs: low pay, an abnormal pattern of work, arduous working conditions. We suggest that cleaners' expectations and standards are influenced by an adaptation process. Their job satisfaction needs to be considered in the light of their past experience. Their employment history shapes their wants and needs and thus affects the way they evaluate their work." (Author's abstract, IAB-Doku) ((en))

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    Skills mismatch, earnings and job satisfaction among older workers (2019)

    Markus, Bönisch; Jakob, Peterbauer; Eduard, Stöger;

    Zitatform

    Markus, Bönisch, Peterbauer Jakob & Stöger Eduard (2019): Skills mismatch, earnings and job satisfaction among older workers. In: Sozialer Fortschritt, Jg. 68, H. 4, S. 339-370. DOI:10.3790/sfo.68.4.339

    Abstract

    "Kompetenzen stellen einen wichtigen Bestandteil wissensbasierter Gesellschaften dar. Individuelle Kompetenzen können den Erfolg am Arbeitsmarkt unterstützen und das Einkommen und die Arbeitszufriedenheit beeinflussen. Sie müssen jedoch auf effiziente Weise eingesetzt werden, um diese positiven Arbeitsmarktergebnisse zu erzielen. Trotz der Tatsache, dass in den letzten Jahren viele Forschungsarbeiten zum Verhältnis der individuell vorhandenen Kompetenzen und den Arbeitsplatzanforderungen (Skill Mismatch) durchgeführt wurden, ist wenig über den Zusammenhang zwischen Alter und Skill Missmatch bekannt. Daher untersuchen wir die Unterschiede zwischen jüngeren (25 - 49) und älteren Arbeitnehmern (50 - 65) anhand des PIAAC-Datensatzes für fünf Länder (Österreich, Deutschland, Spanien, Belgien und Vereinigtes Königreich). Unsere Ergebnisse zeigen, dass ältere Arbeitnehmer im Allgemeinen über niedrigere Kompetenzen verfügen als jüngere Arbeitnehmer, jedoch diese stärker nutzen. Diese stärkere Nutzung (overutilization) führt im Allgemeinen zu einem Lohnvorteil." (Autorenreferat, IAB-Doku)

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    Telework in the 21st Century: An Evolutionary Perspective (2019)

    Messenger, Jon C.;

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    Messenger, Jon C. (Hrsg.) (2019): Telework in the 21st Century. An Evolutionary Perspective. (The ILO Future of Work series), Cheltenham: Elgar, 352 S. DOI:10.4337/9781789903751

    Abstract

    "Technological developments have enabled a dramatic expansion and also an evolution of telework, broadly defined as using ICTs to perform work from outside of an employer’s premises. This volume offers a new conceptual framework explaining the evolution of telework over four decades. It reviews national experiences from Argentina, Brazil, India, Japan, the United States, and ten EU countries regarding the development of telework, its various forms and effects. It also analyses large-scale surveys and company case studies regarding the incidence of telework and its effects on working time, work-life balance, occupational health and well-being, and individual and organizational performance." (Author's abstract, © Edward Elgar Publishing) ((en))

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    Financial, job and health satisfaction: A comparative approach on working people (2019)

    Navarro, María;

    Zitatform

    Navarro, María (2019): Financial, job and health satisfaction: A comparative approach on working people. In: Societies, Jg. 9, H. 2, S. 1-17. DOI:10.3390/soc9020034

    Abstract

    "The determinants of domain satisfactions could be differently evaluated depending on the aspect of life considered, which would lead to different implications for public policies. To test this hypothesis, using the German Socio-Economic Panel (GSOEP), we analyse the effect of different economic and non-economic factors on satisfaction with financial situation, job and health status. The main results confirm that several determinants exert different effects depending on the aspect of life that people are evaluating. For instance, household income only improves satisfaction with financial situation but it does not explain job or health satisfaction. However, those people with an active social life, who are less worried and distrustful, are more satisfied regardless of the aspect of life considered. These findings reflect the importance of studying the main determinants of the domain satisfactions using a comparative perspective to design and evaluate specific public policies, since some measures could be effective for improving satisfaction in one area of an individual's life but not for others." (Author's abstract, IAB-Doku) ((en))

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    Designing flexible work practices for job satisfaction: The relation between job characteristics and work disaggregation in different types of work arrangements (2019)

    Neirotti, Paolo; Gastaldi, Luca; Raguseo, Elisabetta ;

    Zitatform

    Neirotti, Paolo, Elisabetta Raguseo & Luca Gastaldi (2019): Designing flexible work practices for job satisfaction. The relation between job characteristics and work disaggregation in different types of work arrangements. In: New Technology, Work and Employment, Jg. 34, H. 2, S. 116-138. DOI:10.1111/ntwe.12141

    Abstract

    "The literature on flexible work practices has not yet evaluated in detail how the characteristics of a job affect job satisfaction. This study makes a distinction between two types of flexible work practices according to their aims: the accommodation of employees' personal lives (employment practice) and the operational reasons of a firm (work practice). Based on this distinction, we studied how the characteristics of a job, which reflect the use of ICT to support the spatial disaggregation of business processes, influence the relationship between the two types of flexible work practices and job satisfaction. We show, through a survey conducted on 987 workers, that the characteristics of a job that favour work disaggregation positively moderate the influence of flexible work as a work practice on job satisfaction, but they do not moderate the influence of flexible work as an employment practice. The implications for managers, workers and scholars are discussed." (Author's abstract, IAB-Doku) ((en))

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    Vocational interests in the workplace: Rethinking behavior at work (2019)

    Nye, Christopher D.; Rounds, James;

    Zitatform

    Nye, Christopher D. & James Rounds (Hrsg.) (2019): Vocational interests in the workplace. Rethinking behavior at work. (SIOP Organizational frontiers series), New York: Routledge, 312 S. DOI:10.4324/9781315678924

    Abstract

    "Vocational Interests in the Workplace is an essential new work, tying together past literature with contemporary research to present the most comprehensive coverage on vocational interests to date. With increasing recognition of the importance of vocational interests and their relevance to the workplace, this book emphasizes the strong links between vocational interests and work behavior. It proposes new models and approaches that facilitate thorough exploration of the implications of this relationship between interests and practice.
    The authors, drawing on knowledge and experience from a range of professional backgrounds, cover essential topics, including: interest measurement; personnel selection; motivation and performance; expertise; meaningful work; effects of a global business environment; diversity; and the ongoing development of interests through adulthood to retirement." (Author's abstract, IAB-Doku) ((en))

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    Gender inequality and the gender-job satisfaction paradox in Europe (2019)

    Perugini, Cristiano ; Vladisavljevic, Marko;

    Zitatform

    Perugini, Cristiano & Marko Vladisavljevic (2019): Gender inequality and the gender-job satisfaction paradox in Europe. In: Labour economics, Jg. 60, H. October, S. 129-147. DOI:10.1016/j.labeco.2019.06.006

    Abstract

    "Despite being paid less than men and facing worse working conditions, lower promotion opportunities and work-place discrimination, women typically report higher levels of job satisfaction. Twenty years ago Andrew Clark (Clark, 1997) suggested that this might be due to their lower expectations, driven by a number of factors related to current and past positions in the labour market. Although this hypothesis is one of the leading explanations of gender differences in job satisfaction, cross-country research on the relationship between gender inequality and the gender-job satisfaction gap is rare and only descriptive. In this paper, we use the data from EU-SILC module on subjective well-being from 2013 to analyse adjusted gender-job satisfaction gaps in 32 European countries and we relate them to country differences in gender inequalities. Our results provide extensive and robust evidence of a relationship between exposure to more gender equal settings in the early stages of life and smaller gender gaps in job satisfaction. This corroborates the hypothesis that women who grew up in contexts with higher gender equality have expectations increasingly aligned to those of their male counterparts. Our results also show that being employed in typically male occupations enables this alignment too, whereas higher levels of education do not play a similar effect." (Author's abstract, © 2019 Elsevier) ((en))

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    Increases in wellbeing in the transition to retirement for the unemployed: catching up with formerly employed persons (2019)

    Ponomarenko, Valentina ; Leist, Anja K.; Chauvel, Louis ;

    Zitatform

    Ponomarenko, Valentina, Anja K. Leist & Louis Chauvel (2019): Increases in wellbeing in the transition to retirement for the unemployed. Catching up with formerly employed persons. In: Ageing and society, Jg. 39, H. 2, S. 254-276. DOI:10.1017/S0144686X17000976

    Abstract

    "This paper examines the extent to which wellbeing levels change in the transition to retirement depending on transitioning from being employed, unemployed or economically inactive. Whereas transitioning from employment to unemployment has been found to cause a decrease in subjective wellbeing with more time spent in unemployment, it is not clear how transitioning from unemployment to retirement affects wellbeing levels. We use the Survey of Health, Ageing and Retirement in Europe to monitor the life satisfaction of respondents who retire in between two waves. We portray wellbeing scores before and after retirement and then identify the change in life satisfaction during the retirement transition using a First Difference model. Results indicate that being unemployed before retirement is associated with an increase in life satisfaction, but presents mainly a catching-up effect compared to employed persons transitioning to retirement. These results are still significant if we control for selection into unemployment and country differences. Retirement from labour market inactivity does not lead to significant changes in wellbeing. As the wellbeing of unemployed persons recovers after transitioning to retirement, especially the currently unemployed population should be supported to prevent detrimental consequences of economically unfavourable conditions and lower wellbeing." (Author's abstract, IAB-Doku) ((en))

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  • Literaturhinweis

    Explaining the gender gap in job satisfaction (2019)

    Redmond, Paul; McGuiness, Séamus;

    Zitatform

    Redmond, Paul & Séamus McGuiness (2019): Explaining the gender gap in job satisfaction. (IZA discussion paper 12703), Bonn, 7 S.

    Abstract

    "In general, women report greater job satisfaction than men. The existing literature cannot fully explain the nature of this difference, as the gap tends to persist even when controlling for job characteristics. In this paper, we study job satisfaction using recent data for 28 EU countries. Women, on average, are more satisfied than men and the gap remains even when we account for a wide range of personal, job and family characteristics. However, the gap disappears when we include job preferences, as women place greater importance on work-life balance and the intrinsic desirability of the work." (Author's abstract, IAB-Doku) ((en))

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    Generation Z im Vier-Länder-Vergleich: Ein empirischer Vergleich von Deutschland, den Niederlanden, Österreich und Schweiz (2019)

    Scholz, Christian; Grotefend, Lisa-Dorothee;

    Zitatform

    Scholz, Christian & Lisa-Dorothee Grotefend (Hrsg.) (2019): Generation Z im Vier-Länder-Vergleich. Ein empirischer Vergleich von Deutschland, den Niederlanden, Österreich und Schweiz. (Strategie- und Informationsmanagement 36), Augsburg: Hampp, 346 S. DOI:10.978.395710/3246

    Abstract

    "Mit der Generation Z - geboren ab Anfang der 1990er Jahre - tritt zurzeit eine neue Generation in die Arbeitswelt ein, wird von ihr geprägt, aber prägt sie auch selbst. Diese Publikation befasst sich mit dem Phänomen 'Generation Z' - und zwar als Befragung von 3.610 Jugendlichen der Generation Z in Deutschland, den Niederlanden, Österreich sowie der Schweiz. Diese Publikation basiert auf den Masterarbeiten von Sabrina Eilers, Martin Elizen, Kathrin Meier und Claudia Karaca, geschrieben am Lehrstuhl für Betriebswirtschaftslehre, insbesondere Organisation, Personal- und Informationsmanagement der Universität des Saarlandes in Saarbrücken. Beantwortet werden unter anderem folgende Fragen: - Was erwartet die Generation Z vom Arbeitsleben? - Warum entscheidet sie sich für oder gegen einen Arbeitgeber? - In welcher Büroarchitektur will sie arbeiten? - Träumt sie wirklich vom Großraumbüro und vom Desksharing? - Welche Lebensträume hat sie? - Wie stellt sie sich Work-Life-Balance vor? - Wie sollten Arbeitszeitmodelle aussehen? - Wovor hat sie Angst? -Wie steht sie zu Politik und zu Tagespolitik? Hinzu kommt noch eine weitere und ganz wichtige Frage: Ist 'Generation Z' ein nationales beziehungsweise regionales Phänomen oder ist sie weltweit identisch? Ganz konkret: Was kommt dabei heraus, wenn man vier benachbarte Länder aus Mitteleuropa miteinander vergleicht?" (Verlagsangaben)

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    Job satisfaction as a determinant of employees' optimal well-being in an instrumental variable approach (2019)

    Sironi, Emiliano ;

    Zitatform

    Sironi, Emiliano (2019): Job satisfaction as a determinant of employees' optimal well-being in an instrumental variable approach. In: Quality & quantity, Jg. 53, H. 4, S. 1721-1742. DOI:10.1007/s11135-019-00835-3

    Abstract

    "The correlation between measures of a high level of job satisfaction and well-being is well documented in the literature; however, such a relationship may be potentially bidirectional. If an increase in job satisfaction affects optimal well-being, the reverse relationship can also be hypothesized. In addition, the relationship between job satisfaction and well-being may be polluted by the presence of omitted variables that can be correlated both with the satisfaction in the workplace and with a measure of optimal wellbeing. Using the sixth round of the European Social Survey, this paper utilizes an instrumental variable approach to isolate the effect of job satisfaction on optimal well-being variation that is independent of unobserved individual characteristics. After having controlled for the role of socio-economic profiles of interviewed individuals, our findings confirm a strong and significantly positive influence of job satisfaction on optimal well-being. The novelty of our analysis is twofold: firstly, we employ an instrumental variable approach to correct for endogeneity that might the effect of job satisfaction on well-being. Secondly, we use an innovative measure of optimal well-being, which we adopt as an outcome variable for measuring a multi-dimensional definition of well-being dealing with both hedonic and eudemonic streams." (Author's abstract, © Springer-Verlag) ((en))

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    Employment contract, job insecurity and employees' affective well-being: the role of self- and collective efficacy (2019)

    Sora, Beatriz; Peiró, José M.; Caballer, Amparo; Höge, Thomas;

    Zitatform

    Sora, Beatriz, Thomas Höge, Amparo Caballer & José M. Peiró (2019): Employment contract, job insecurity and employees' affective well-being. The role of self- and collective efficacy. In: Economic and Industrial Democracy, Jg. 40, H. 2, S. 193-214. DOI:10.1177/0143831X18804659

    Abstract

    "A large amount of research has focused on job insecurity, but without obtaining consistent results. Some authors have pointed that this variability might be due to the operationalization of job insecurity. Different types of job insecurity can provoke different employee reactions. The aim of this study is to analyse the effect of job insecurity, understood as temporary employment (objective job insecurity) and personal perception (subjective job insecurity), on affective well-being. In addition, the moderator roles of job self-efficacy and collective efficacy are examined in the relationship between job insecurity and employees' affective well-being. This study was carried out with 1435 employees from 138 Spanish and Austrian organizations. The results showed a different effect of job insecurity depending on its conceptualization. Only subjective job insecurity was negatively related to affective well-being. Moreover, both self- and collective efficacy moderated the subjective job insecurity - outcomes relation, ameliorating employees' well-being levels when they perceived job insecurity." (Author's abstract, IAB-Doku) ((en))

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    Intensivierung und Flexibilisierung von Arbeitszeiten: Wirkungen auf Gesundheit und Zufriedenheit (2019)

    Stadler, Bettina;

    Zitatform

    Stadler, Bettina (2019): Intensivierung und Flexibilisierung von Arbeitszeiten: Wirkungen auf Gesundheit und Zufriedenheit. In: M. Griesbacher, J. Hödl, J. Muckenhuber & K. Scaria-Braunstein (Hrsg.) (2019): Intensivierung der Arbeit. Perspektiven auf Arbeitszeit und technologischen Wandel, S. 60-72.

    Abstract

    "Schon seit vielen Jahren sind Arbeitszeiten ein "Dauerbrenner" sowohl in der wissenschaftlichen als auch der politischen Debatte. Erhöht sich die Arbeits- und auch die Lebensqualität durch flexiblere Arbeitszeiten in jedem Fall oder müssen ArbeitnehmerInnen durch Arbeitszeitregelungen auch vor einem unbeschränkten Zugriff der ArbeitgeberInnen geschützt werden? Diese Frage kann nur, das hat Hartmut Seifert bereits 2005 angeregt, durch empirische Analysen beantwortet werden (Seifert 2005). Im Hintergrund stehen dabei viel weitergehende Fragen: Sind Menschen in der Lage, ihre Arbeitszeiten selbst zu steuern und dabei auf ihr Wohlbefinden und längerfristig auch auf ihre Gesundheit zu achten, oder müssen sie durch Regelungen geschützt werden, in manchen Fällen durchaus auch vor sich selbst, um nicht auf lange Sicht Schaden zu erleiden?" (Autorenreferat, IAB-Doku)

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    Die Arbeitszufriedenheit von Berufseinsteigern in den Gesundheitsberufen (2019)

    Ulrich, Gert; Karstens, Sven; Mahler, Cornelia; Goetz, Katja; Homberg, Angelika;

    Zitatform

    Ulrich, Gert, Angelika Homberg, Sven Karstens, Katja Goetz & Cornelia Mahler (2019): Die Arbeitszufriedenheit von Berufseinsteigern in den Gesundheitsberufen. In: Das Gesundheitswesen, Jg. 81, H. 2, S. 99-105. DOI:10.1055/s-0043-107873

    Abstract

    "Einleitung: Ziel der vorliegenden Befragung war es, die Arbeitszufriedenheit von Berufseinsteigern in ausgewählten Gesundheitsberufen zu erfassen und determinierende Faktoren der Arbeitszufriedenheit zu identifizieren. Methoden: Es wurden insgesamt 579 Absolventen aus den Berufsgruppen Pflege (P; Altenpflege, Gesundheits- und Krankenpflege, Gesundheits- und Kinderkrankenpflege; n=368), Therapie (T; Physiotherapie, Logopädie; n=102) und Diagnostik (D; Medizinisch-technische Laboratoriums Assistenz, Medizinisch-technische Radiologie Assistenz; n=109) ca. ein Jahr nach Ausbildungsabschluss zu einem Online-Survey eingeladen. Die Arbeitszufriedenheit wurde mittels des Warr-Cook-Wall (WCW) Fragebogens, bestehend aus 10 Fragen, bestimmt. Neben der deskriptiven Analyse wurde eine lineare Regression zur Bestimmung der Einflussfaktoren auf die Arbeitszufriedenheit durchgeführt. Ergebnisse: Ausgewertet wurden die Daten von 189 Berufseinsteigern (P: 121, T: 32, D: 36; männlich: 19%; Rücklaufquote: 32,6%). Die Gesamtzufriedenheit mit dem Arbeitsplatz aller Berufseinsteiger betrug 4,9±1,6 (MW±SD) und war bei den T (5,4±1,4) gegenüber den P (4,7±1,6) und den D (5,0±1,5) leicht erhöht. Besonders positiv wurde von allen Berufsgruppen die Zufriedenheit mit Kollegen und Mitarbeitern beurteilt. Eine geringere Zufriedenheit fand sich über die Berufsgruppen hinweg bei der Variable 'Einkommen'. Die Variable der Zufriedenheit mit 'Kollegen und Mitarbeitern' zeigte in der linearen Regression die höchste Assoziation mit der Gesamtzufriedenheit mit dem Arbeitsplatz. Schlussfolgerung: Die einzelnen Variablen des WCW-Fragebogens deuten auf gute bis sehr gute Zufriedenheitswerte der von uns befragten Berufseinsteiger hin. Kollegen stellen die wichtigste Quelle für die eigene Arbeitszufriedenheit dar. Vor dem Hintergrund des sich abzeichnenden Fachkräftemangels liefern die Ergebnisse einen wichtigen Beitrag, um die Arbeitszufriedenheit zu erhalten und somit die Versorgungsqualität zu sichern." (Autorenreferat, IAB-Doku)

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    Arbeitszeit und Arbeitsort - (wie viel) Flexibilität ist gesund?: Ergebnisse einer repräsentativen Befragung unter Erwerbstätigen zu mobiler Arbeit und gesundheitlichen Beschwerden (2019)

    Waltersbacher, Andrea; Maisuradze, Maia; Schröder, Helmut;

    Zitatform

    Waltersbacher, Andrea, Maia Maisuradze & Helmut Schröder (2019): Arbeitszeit und Arbeitsort - (wie viel) Flexibilität ist gesund? Ergebnisse einer repräsentativen Befragung unter Erwerbstätigen zu mobiler Arbeit und gesundheitlichen Beschwerden. In: B. Badura, A. Ducki, H. Schröder, J. Klose & M. Meyer (Hrsg.) (2019): Fehlzeiten-Report 2019 : Digitalisierung - gesundes Arbeiten ermöglichen, S. 77-107. DOI:10.1007/978-3-662-59044-7_7

    Abstract

    "Immer erreichbar, hochflexibel und ständig mobil - infolge der Digitalisierung droht die bisherige, bei den meisten Erwerbstätigen vorherrschende Trennung von Arbeit und Privatleben verlorenzugehen. Digitale Informations- und Kommunikationsgeräte ermöglichen bereits zum heutigen Zeitpunkt zahlreichen Beschäftigtengruppen die Möglichkeit zeit- und ortsunabhängig zu arbeiten. Diese Formen von mobiler Arbeit eröffnet Betrieben und Beschäftigten neue Gestaltungsspielräume, stellen aber auch neue Herausforderungen dar. So stellt sich die Frage, ob die Flexibilisierung von Arbeitszeiten und -orten einen Einfluss auf das Wohlbefinden der Beschäftigten hat. In einer repräsentativen Befragungsstudie unter Erwerbstätigen im Jahr 2019 werden die Beschäftigten, die ausschließlich in der Betriebsstätte des Arbeitgebers arbeiten mit denjenigen Beschäftigten verglichen, die entweder zu Hause oder an verschiedenen Orten arbeiten. Hierbei zeigt sich, dass einerseits die Flexibilisierung der Arbeitszeiten und Arbeitsorte die Zufriedenheit der Beschäftigten erhöhen kann, aber andererseits der erhöhte Aufwand der Selbstorganisation und der Abgrenzung von den Anforderungen des Betriebes negativ auf das Wohlbefinden und die Gesundheit einwirken. Beschäftigte, die mit großer Autonomie viel in ihrer häuslichen Umgebung arbeiten, beichten am häufigsten darüber nicht abschalten zu können, aber auch von psychischen Beeinträchtigungen." (Autorenreferat, IAB-Doku)

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  • Literaturhinweis

    Generational Differences in Definitions of Meaningful Work: A Mixed Methods Study (2019)

    Weeks, Kelly Pledger; Schaffert, Caitlin;

    Zitatform

    Weeks, Kelly Pledger & Caitlin Schaffert (2019): Generational Differences in Definitions of Meaningful Work: A Mixed Methods Study. In: Journal of Business Ethics, Jg. 156, H. 4, S. 1045-1061. DOI:10.1007/s10551-017-3621-4

    Abstract

    "The search for meaningful work has been of interest to researchers from a variety of disciplines for decades and seems to have grown even more recently. Much of the literature assumes that employees share a sense of what is meaningful in work and there isn't much attention given to how and why meanings might differ (Rosso et al. in Res Organ Behav 30:91–127, 2010). Researchers have not only called for more research studying demographic differences in definitions of meaning (e.g., Michaelson et al. in J Bus Ethics 121(1):77–90, 2014), but also moreresearch utilizing mixed methods to study psychological concepts like meaningful work (e.g., Eid and Diener, in Eid, Diener (eds) Handbook of multimethod measurement in psychology, American Psychological Association, Washington, 2006). This study specifically examines differences across generational cohorts on their prioritization of sources of meaningful work through qualitative, in-depth interviews followed by a more generalizable, quantitative survey. Findings from the qualitative study show that generational cohorts define the meaning in their jobs differently, and they hold negative perceptions about the lack of desire for meaning in each of the other cohorts. Study 2 maps generational cohorts on the comprehensive model of meaningful work designed by Lips-Wiersma and Morris (J Bus Ethics 88(3):491–511, 2009) to reveal that although there are some differences in prioritization of sources of meaningful work, all generational cohorts share similar desire to “develop and become themselves” when asked about their definitions of meaningful work. Implications and future research are discussed." (Author's abstract, IAB-Doku) ((en))

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    Flexible work and work-related outcomes: The role of perceived organizational alignment (2019)

    Zafari, Setareh; Hartner-Tiefenthaler, Martina; Theresia Koeszegi, Sabine;

    Zitatform

    Zafari, Setareh, Martina Hartner-Tiefenthaler & Sabine Theresia Koeszegi (2019): Flexible work and work-related outcomes: The role of perceived organizational alignment. In: Management Revue, Jg. 30, H. 1, S. 63-92. DOI:10.5771/0935-9915-2019-1-63

    Abstract

    "Recent developments in information and communication technology have led to renewed interest in the impact of flexible work on work-related outcomes such as job satisfaction, organizational identification and work engagement. Although there is a vast amount of literature indicating the positive association between job autonomy and work-related outcomes, there has been little discussion about the contextual conditions that strengthen this relationship. This paper analyzes the role of perceived organizational alignment as a conditional factor and shows that autonomy alone cannot explain an organization's success in improving work-related outcomes. An analysis of online survey from 481 employees shows that the perceived organizational alignment moderates the positive effect of autonomy on work-related outcomes in the context of flexible work. For employees who perceive organizational alignment to be high, the positive relationships are strengthened for work engagement and organizational identification, but attenuated for job satisfaction. Theoretical and practical implications of these findings are discussed." (Author's abstract, IAB-Doku) ((en))

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    Fehlzeiten-Report 2018: Sinn erleben - Arbeit und Gesundheit. Zahlen, Daten, Analysen aus allen Branchen der Wirtschaft (2018)

    Badura, Bernhard; Schröder, Helmut; Ducki, Antje; Klose, Joachim; Meyer, Markus;

    Zitatform

    Badura, Bernhard, Antje Ducki, Helmut Schröder, Joachim Klose & Markus Meyer (Hrsg.) (2018): Fehlzeiten-Report 2018. Sinn erleben - Arbeit und Gesundheit. Zahlen, Daten, Analysen aus allen Branchen der Wirtschaft. (Fehlzeiten-Report), Berlin: Springer London, 608 S.

    Abstract

    "Der vorliegende Fehlzeiten-Report beleuchtet das Thema 'Sinn erleben - Arbeit und Gesundheit' aus gesellschaftlicher, unternehmerischer und individueller Perspektive. Welche Rolle das Betriebliche Gesundheitsmanagement (BGM) für die Förderung des Sinnerlebens spielen kann erörtern 28 Fachbeiträge u. a. mit folgenden Fragen: Welchen Zusammenhang gibt es zwischen dem Erleben von sinnhafter Erwerbsarbeit und der Gesundheit der Beschäftigten? Wie erleben Beschäftigte den 'Sinn ihrer Arbeit' und wie können Unternehmen ihre Mitarbeiter unterstützen, ihre Arbeit als sinnerfüllte Tätigkeiten zu erleben? Wie können Führungskräfte und das Unternehmensklima das Sinnerleben positiv beeinflussen? Welche Konzepte und Angebote gibt es im Rahmen des BGM, um zur Prävention von Sinnkrisen beizutragen?
    Darüber hinaus ist der Report durch umfassende Daten und Analysen ein wertvoller Ratgeber für alle, die Verantwortung für den Arbeits- und Gesundheitsschutz in Unternehmen tragen." (Autorenreferat, IAB-Doku)

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    The well-being of the overemployed and the underemployed and the rise in depression in the UK (2018)

    Bell, David N. F.; Blanchflower, David G. ;

    Zitatform

    Bell, David N. F. & David G. Blanchflower (2018): The well-being of the overemployed and the underemployed and the rise in depression in the UK. (NBER working paper 24840), Cambrige, Mass., 36 S. DOI:10.3386/w24840

    Abstract

    "In this paper we build on our earlier work on underemployment using data from the UK. In particular, we explore their well-being based on hours preferences rather than on involuntary part-time work used in the prior literature. We make use of five main measures of well-being: happiness; life satisfaction; whether life is worthwhile; anxiety and depression. The underemployed have higher levels of well-being than the unemployed and disabled but lower levels than any other group of workers, full or part-time. The more that actual hours differ from preferred hours the lower is a worker's well-being. This is true for those who say they want more hours (the underemployed) and those who say they want less (the over employed). We find strong evidence of a rise in depression and anxiety (negative affect) in the years since the onset of austerity in 2010 that is not matched by declines in happiness measures (positive affect). The fear of unemployment obtained from monthly surveys from the EU has also been on the rise since 2015. We find evidence of an especially large rise in anxiety and depression among workers in general and the underemployed in particular. The underemployed don't want to be underemployed." (Author's abstract, IAB-Doku) ((en))

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    Works councils, training and employee satisfaction (2018)

    Bellmann, Lutz ; Leber, Ute; Hübler, Olaf;

    Zitatform

    Bellmann, Lutz, Olaf Hübler & Ute Leber (2018): Works councils, training and employee satisfaction. (IZA discussion paper 11871), Bonn, 29 S.

    Abstract

    "This paper investigates the role of works councils in job satisfaction. Using the recently developed Linked Personnel Panel, we consider both the direct and indirect impact via further training. Basic estimates on an individual level do not reveal clearly direct effects, but on an establishment level, the existence of a works council increases the average job satisfaction in a company. In more extended approaches, we also find a positive, weakly significant link on an individual level accompanied by positive training with regard to job satisfaction if we control for personal characteristics, working conditions, firm size, collegiality variables and industry dummies. Firms with industry-wide bargaining agreements drive this result. The effects are stronger if the firm carries the training costs and if the share of trained workers within the firm measures training. The direct impact of works councils remains positive but becomes insignificant if Lewbel's instrumental variables estimator is applied." (Author's abstract, IAB-Doku) ((en))

    Beteiligte aus dem IAB

    Bellmann, Lutz ; Leber, Ute;
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  • Literaturhinweis

    Different strokes for different folks: entrepreneurs' job satisfaction and the intersection of gender and migration background (2018)

    Bijedić, Teita; Piper, Alan;

    Zitatform

    Bijedić, Teita & Alan Piper (2018): Different strokes for different folks. Entrepreneurs' job satisfaction and the intersection of gender and migration background. (SOEPpapers on multidisciplinary panel data research at DIW Berlin 1011), Berlin, 24 S.

    Abstract

    "Migrant enterprises comprise about 10% of all enterprises in Germany and are therefore a crucial part of the German economy and its entrepreneurial ecosystems. Relatedly, migrant entrepreneurship is a highly recognized topic within political discussions as well as within entrepreneurship research. While there is already an impressive body of work regarding the nature and quality of migrant enterprises, many questions regarding the personal motives and satisfaction of migrant entrepreneurs still remain unanswered (particularly with reference to gender and generation of migration). Using the German Socio-Economic Panel dataset, we close this research gap by investigating the job satisfaction of migrant entrepreneurs in Germany compared with native entrepreneurs, and also with conventionally employed migrants and natives. First generation migrants show, in general, less job satisfaction than the native population. Second generation male migrant entrepreneurs' show less job satisfaction, however this association is reversed for females: second generation female migrant entrepreneurs are more satisfied with their self-employment than their native counterparts. These differing results lead to differing implications for policy makers who wish to create and develop entrepreneurial and labour market support for different target groups." (Author's abstract, IAB-Doku) ((en))

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    Are schools different? Wellbeing and commitment among staff in schools and elsewhere (2018)

    Bryson, Alex ; Wilkinson, David; Stokes, Lucy ;

    Zitatform

    Bryson, Alex, Lucy Stokes & David Wilkinson (2018): Are schools different? Wellbeing and commitment among staff in schools and elsewhere. (IZA discussion paper 11456), Bonn, 49 S.

    Abstract

    "Using nationally representative linked employer-employee data for Britain in 2004 and 2011 we find school staff are more satisfied and more contented with their jobs than 'like' employees in other workplaces. The differentials are largely accounted for by the occupations school employees undertake and perceptions of job quality. School employees are also more committed to their organization than non-school employees, a difference that remains large and statistically significant having conditioned on job quality, human resource management practices (HRM), managerial style and other features of employees' working environment. Using panel data for workplaces and their employees observed in 2004 and 2011 we find increases in organizational commitment are linked to improvements in workplace performance in schools, but not in other workplaces." (Author's abstract, IAB-Doku) ((en))

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    Nonmonetary incentives and the implications of work as a source of meaning (2018)

    Cassar, Lea; Meier, Stephan;

    Zitatform

    Cassar, Lea & Stephan Meier (2018): Nonmonetary incentives and the implications of work as a source of meaning. In: The Journal of Economic Perspectives, Jg. 32, H. 3, S. 215-238. DOI:10.1257/jep.32.3.215

    Abstract

    "Empirical research in economics has begun to explore the idea that workers care about nonmonetary aspects of work. An increasing number of economic studies using survey and experimental methods have shown that nonmonetary incentives and nonpecuniary aspects of one's job have substantial impacts on job satisfaction, productivity, and labor supply. By drawing on this evidence and relating it to the literature in psychology, this paper argues that work represents much more than simply earning an income: for many people, work is a source of meaning. In the next section, we give an economic interpretation of meaningful work and emphasize how it is affected by the mission of the organization and the extent to which job design fulfills the three psychological needs at the basis of self-determination theory: autonomy, competence, and relatedness. We point to the evidence that not everyone cares about having a meaningful job and discuss potential sources of this heterogeneity. We sketch a theoretical framework to start to formalize work as a source of meaning and think about how to incorporate this idea into agency theory and labor supply models. We discuss how workers' search for meaning may affect the design of monetary and nonmonetary incentives. We conclude by suggesting some insights and open questions for future research." (Author's abstract, IAB-Doku) ((en))

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    The magic of the new: how job changes affect job satisfaction (2018)

    Chadi, Adrian ; Hetschko, Clemens ;

    Zitatform

    Chadi, Adrian & Clemens Hetschko (2018): The magic of the new. How job changes affect job satisfaction. In: Journal of economics & management strategy, Jg. 27, H. 1, S. 23-39., 2017-07-02. DOI:10.1111/jems.12217

    Abstract

    "We investigate a crucial event for job satisfaction: changing one's workplace. For representative German panel data, we show that the reason why the previous employment ended is strongly linked to satisfaction with the new job. Workers initiating a change of employer experience extraordinarily high job satisfaction, though in the short term only. To investigate causality, we exploit the event of plant closure as an exogenous trigger of job switching. In this case, we ?nd no signi?cantly positive e?ect of job changes on job satisfaction. Our ?ndings complement research on workers' well-being and concern labor market policies and human resource management." (Author's abstract, IAB-Doku) ((en))

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    Unfairness at work: well-being and quits (2018)

    D'Ambrosio, Conchita; Clark, Andrew E. ; Barazzetta, Marta;

    Zitatform

    D'Ambrosio, Conchita, Andrew E. Clark & Marta Barazzetta (2018): Unfairness at work: well-being and quits. (IZA discussion paper 11318), Bonn, 24 S.

    Abstract

    "We here consider the effect of the level of income that individuals consider to be fair for the job they do, which we take as measure of comparison income, on both subjective well-being and objective future job quitting. In six waves of German Socio-Economic Panel data, the extent to which own labour income is perceived to be unfair is significantly negatively correlated with subjective well-being, both in terms of cognitive evaluations (life and job satisfaction) and affect (the frequency of feeling happy, sad and angry). Perceived unfairness also translates into objective labour-market behaviour, with current unfair income predicting future job quits." (Author's abstract, IAB-Doku) ((en))

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    Career stages and occupations impacts on workers motivations (2018)

    Duarte, Henrique ; Lopes, Diniz;

    Zitatform

    Duarte, Henrique & Diniz Lopes (2018): Career stages and occupations impacts on workers motivations. In: International journal of manpower, Jg. 39, H. 5, S. 746-763. DOI:10.1108/IJM-02-2017-0026

    Abstract

    "Purpose
    The career concept has become fuzzier due to changing work patterns, the ageing workforce and the environmental changes occurring during workers lifespans. Together this requires a renewed and broader reaching contextualization of this concept. The purpose of this paper is to set out an integrative approach arguing that the integration of career stage models with occupational groups proves more explanative of intrinsic and extrinsic worker motivations.
    Design/methodology/approach
    Secondary data from 23 European countries were drawn from the European Social Survey 2006. The construct validity and reliability of indicators was analyzed. Hypotheses were tested using discriminant analysis.
    Findings
    Results showed that neither occupations nor career stages are determinants per se of intrinsic motivations, but are better explained by their mutual integration. Career stages were shown to predict per se extrinsic motivations.
    Research limitations/implications
    The recourse to the European Social Survey pre-determined scales and the application of age ranges as proxies for careers stages suggested the usage of more specific measures in future studies.
    Practical implications
    Career management and compensation policies might be better tailored to worker motivations by considering the age ranges (as proxies of career stages) and workers' occupations.
    Originality/value
    Findings evidenced the explanatory value of occupations for worker motivations and allowed putting into perspective the contextualization of not only boundaryless and protean career concepts, but also career stage theories. Data support the ecological validity of applying a career stages and occupations framework to a highly diversified and representative sample of European countries." (Author's abstract, © Emerald Group) ((en))

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    Paradox lost: The disappearing female job satisfaction premium (2018)

    Green, Colin P. ; Heywood, John S. ; Kler, Parvinder; Leeves, Gareth;

    Zitatform

    Green, Colin P., John S. Heywood, Parvinder Kler & Gareth Leeves (2018): Paradox lost: The disappearing female job satisfaction premium. In: BJIR, Jg. 56, H. 3, S. 484-502. DOI:10.1111/bjir.12291

    Abstract

    "Using the original data source of Clark, we show that over the last two decades the female satisfaction gap he documented has vanished. This reflects a strong secular decline in female job satisfaction. This decline happened both because younger women became less satisfied as they aged, and because new female workers entered with lower job satisfaction than their early 1990s peers. Decompositions make clear that the decline does not reflect changing job characteristics for women but rather their increasingly less favourable evaluation of job characteristics. These findings fit with the suggestion that women in the early 1990s had a gap between their labour market expectations and actual experience that has since closed and that the gender satisfaction gap has vanished as a consequence." (Author's abstract, Published by arrangement with John Wiley & Sons) ((en))

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    Work engagement as a key for unlocking performance: An investigation across different organizational levels (2018)

    Gutermann, Daniela;

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    Gutermann, Daniela (2018): Work engagement as a key for unlocking performance. An investigation across different organizational levels. Amsterdam, 225 S.

    Abstract

    "Constructive leadership and leaders' work engagement itself are important levers for employees' work engagement. Individual and organizational work engagement leads to individual and organizational performance. The Engagement-Index (ENG-I) is a statistically valiated and well accepted measurement of behavioral work engagement in organizations. These are the results of the dissertation by Daniela Gutermann.
    Work engagement
    Since people spend around one third of their day at work, the question of which factors enhance their well-being and their motivation at work is an important one. Moreover, organizations have to face several challenges, such as a quickly changing global economic market, digitalization, and continuous need for innovation. Work engagement is a construct that is an asset for both employees and organizations. Gutermann aims to answer the question which factors may foster work engagement within organizations and how this is related to individual and organizational performance across different organizational levels.
    Constructive and destructive leadership
    Daniela Gutermann investigated how constructive and destructive leadership is related to work engagement and which role leaders' work engagement itself may play for followers' tendency to engage in their work. Additionally, since a lot of organizations are interested in the topic of work engagement, she introduced a new engagement assessment - the Engagement Index (ENG-I) - that faces both, scientific and organizational requirements. Finally Gutermann analyzed the link between individual and organizational work engagement and performance by considering causality issues." (Author's abstract, IAB-Doku) ((en))

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    The impact of minimum wages on well-being: evidence from a quasi- experiment in Germany (2018)

    Gülal, Filiz; Ayaita, Adam ;

    Zitatform

    Gülal, Filiz & Adam Ayaita (2018): The impact of minimum wages on well-being. Evidence from a quasi- experiment in Germany. (SOEPpapers on multidisciplinary panel data research at DIW Berlin 969), Berlin, 45 S.

    Abstract

    "To analyze well-being effects of minimum wages, the introduction of a minimum wage in Germany in 2015 is used as a quasi-experiment. Based on the representative SOEP data, a difference-in-differences design compares the development of life, job, and pay satisfaction between those who are affected by the reform according to their pre-intervention wages and those who already have marginally higher wages so that they are not directly affected. The results show that the minimum wage has significantly positive effects on all considered dimensions of well-being, on average, with an increase in life satisfaction by 0.10 standard deviations (0.15 points on a ten-point Likert scale). Positive effects last at least until one year after the reform. Life satisfaction tends to increase particularly in the region that is overall economically less developed (East Germany). The results hold if those who are not employed anymore after the reform are included in the analysis." (Author's abstract, IAB-Doku) ((en))

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    Arbeit auf Abruf, Rufbereitschaft und Bereitschaftsdienst: Wenn die Arbeit ruft (2018)

    Hank, Eva; Stegmaier, Jens ;

    Zitatform

    Hank, Eva & Jens Stegmaier (2018): Arbeit auf Abruf, Rufbereitschaft und Bereitschaftsdienst: Wenn die Arbeit ruft. (IAB-Kurzbericht 14/2018), Nürnberg, 11 S.

    Abstract

    "Fragen der Arbeitszeit und ihrer Flexibilität werden seit einiger Zeit wieder vermehrt diskutiert. Während Arbeitgeber die Bedeutung eines flexiblen Personaleinsatzes für die Wettbewerbsfähigkeit der Unternehmen betonen, hebt die Arbeitnehmerseite hervor, dass die Kontrolle über flexible Arbeitszeitmodelle nicht einseitig bei den Arbeitgebern liegen darf. In diesem Zusammenhang rückte Arbeit auf Abruf - bei der Arbeitgeber und Arbeitnehmer lediglich die Dauer, nicht aber die Lage der Arbeitszeit vereinbaren - in den Fokus der Diskussion. In dem Kurzbericht wird zunächst die Verbreitung unterschiedlicher Formen von 'Rufarbeit' untersucht: Arbeit auf Abruf, Rufbereitschaft und Bereitschaftsdienst. Der Fokus liegt dann auf den Determinanten und möglichen Folgen dieser Arbeitsformen und abschließend werden aktuelle Änderungsvorhaben der Bundesregierung betrachtet, die Arbeit auf Abruf in ihren Koalitionsvertrag aufgenommen hat." (Autorenreferat, IAB-Doku)

    Beteiligte aus dem IAB

    Stegmaier, Jens ;
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    Unhappy with well-being research in the temporary work context: mapping review and research agenda (2018)

    Imhof, Susanne; Andresen, Maike ;

    Zitatform

    Imhof, Susanne & Maike Andresen (2018): Unhappy with well-being research in the temporary work context. Mapping review and research agenda. In: The international journal of human resource management, Jg. 29, H. 1, S. 127-164. DOI:10.1080/09585192.2017.1384395

    Abstract

    "While temporary workers' specific employment circumstances strongly suggest negative consequences for their well-being, research on temporary workers' well-being shows serious inconsistencies. To identify possible reasons, we provide an overview of previous well-being research in the temporary work context. The mapping review shows that inconsistencies are caused both by the use of the umbrella term temporary work to describe a wider range of employment forms with divergent characteristics and the use of the buzzword well-being for various well-being indicators. In addition, the portfolio of employment-specific antecedents used is insufficient to gain a comprehensive view of temporary workers' well-being situation. Based on these findings, we propose an agenda for future well-being research in the temporary work context. A first key implication is that analyses considering country-specific circumstances and employment-specific characteristics of particular atypical employment situations are needed. Secondly, a more comprehensive portfolio of employment-specific and individual antecedents would help with gaining deeper insights into temporary workers' well-being situation. In addition, effects of well-being on attitudinal and behavioral outcomes should be analyzed to demonstrate the return on investment of organizations' well-being enhancing activities. Finally, well-being oriented HR practices and their implementation in the temporary work context are part of the proposed research agenda." (Author's abstract, IAB-Doku) ((en))

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    Paying for what kind of performance?: performance pay and multitasking in mission-oriented jobs (2018)

    Jones, Daniel; Vlassopoulos, Michael; Tonin, Mirco;

    Zitatform

    Jones, Daniel, Mirco Tonin & Michael Vlassopoulos (2018): Paying for what kind of performance? Performance pay and multitasking in mission-oriented jobs. (CESifo working paper 7156), München, 40 S.

    Abstract

    "How does pay-for-performance (P4P) impact productivity, multitasking, and the composition of workers in mission-oriented jobs? These are central issues in sectors like education or healthcare. We conduct a laboratory experiment, manipulating compensation and mission, to answer these questions. We find that P4P has positive effects on productivity on the incentivized dimension of effort and negative effects on the non-incentivized dimension for workers in nonmission- oriented treatments. In mission-oriented treatments, P4P generates minimal change on either dimension. Participants in the non-mission sector - but not in the mission-oriented treatments - sort on ability, with lower ability workers opting out of the P4P scheme." (Author's abstract, IAB-Doku) ((en))

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    Team production benefits from a permanent fear of exclusion (2018)

    Kopányi-Peuker, Anita; Sloof, Randolph; Offerman, Theo;

    Zitatform

    Kopányi-Peuker, Anita, Theo Offerman & Randolph Sloof (2018): Team production benefits from a permanent fear of exclusion. In: European Economic Review, Jg. 103, H. April, S. 125-149. DOI:10.1016/j.euroecorev.2018.01.005

    Abstract

    "One acclaimed role of managers is to monitor workers in team production processes and discipline them through the threat of terminating them from the team. We extend a standard weakest link experiment with a manager who can decide to replace some workers at a cost. We address two main questions: (i) Does the fear of exclusion need to be a permanent element of contractual agreements? (ii) Are the results robust to the introduction of noise in workers' productivity? We find that the fear of exclusion strongly encourages cooperation among workers, but it does not generate the trust needed for cooperation once the fear of exclusion is lifted. That is, once some workers receive a permanent contract, effort levels steadily decrease. The results are robust to the introduction of noise in the link between effort and productivity." (Author's abstract, © 2018 Elsevier) ((en))

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    Compensation and incentives in the workplace (2018)

    Lazear, Edward P.;

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    Lazear, Edward P. (2018): Compensation and incentives in the workplace. In: The Journal of Economic Perspectives, Jg. 32, H. 3, S. 195-214. DOI:10.1257/jep.32.3.195

    Abstract

    "Labor is supplied because most of us must work to live. Indeed, it is called 'work' in part because without compensation, the overwhelming majority of workers would not otherwise perform the tasks. The theme of this essay is that incentives affect behavior and that economics as a science has made good progress in specifying how compensation and its form influences worker effort. This is a broad topic, and the purpose here is not a comprehensive literature review on each of many topics. Instead, a sample of some of the most applicable papers are discussed with the goal of demonstrating that compensation, incentives, and productivity are inseparably linked." (Author's abstract, IAB-Doku) ((en))

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    Performance pay jobs and job satisfaction (2018)

    Ledic, Marko;

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    Ledic, Marko (2018): Performance pay jobs and job satisfaction. In: CESIfo Economic Studies, Jg. 64, H. 1, S. 78-102. DOI:10.1093/cesifo/ify008

    Abstract

    "In recent decades there have been a growing number of studies that investigated the effects of personal and job characteristics on the subjective well-being on the job. Besides, the empirical findings reveal that workers who are paid on the piece rates exert more effort and earn more than those workers paid an hourly salary. Since the possible effects of performance paying jobs on the well-being of workers stay hidden, we have tackled the following issue by providing the effects that the performance pay job schemes have on job satisfaction. We have used the Korean Labour and Income Panel Survey which allowed us to distinguish between the workers who are paid by performance and those who are paid by fixed rate. We have shown that workers in the performance pay job schemes have a higher subjective well-being on the job than workers who are using the non-performance pay job schemes. The following result holds true even after we have controlled for the level of earnings, attitudes towards risk, and other personal and job-related characteristics. Finally, we have exploited the information on the type of performance pay schemes to analyse how different performance pay schemes affect job satisfaction. The results have shown that workers who are employed on either individual or group or company performance pay job schemes are more satisfied on their job than workers who are paid by the fixed amount." (Author's abstract, IAB-Doku) ((en))

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    The causal analysis of the development of the unemployment effect on life satisfaction (2018)

    Lerch, Nils;

    Zitatform

    Lerch, Nils (2018): The causal analysis of the development of the unemployment effect on life satisfaction. (SOEPpapers on multidisciplinary panel data research at DIW Berlin 991), Berlin, 51 S.

    Abstract

    "The long-term negative effects of unemployment, especially on subjective well-being, have been indicated by many studies. Therefore, unemployment and its effects on the individual life course must remain an important challenge for social policy. Many studies have focused on the cognitive component of subjective well-being, i.e., life satisfaction, and have analysed in particular its development during the unemployment period. The trajectory is usually characterized by the effects of anticipation, reaction and adaption. Studies have shown different findings regarding the shape of the effect development. The present study discusses the effect development in greater detail and analyses whether the development of the effect is different depending on unemployment experience using longitudinal data from the German Socio-Economic Panel (SOEP) and applying fixed effects regressions. The findings of this study support a non-linear effect development, which begins with the anticipation of unemployment. The trend can be described by a linear function and polynomials up to the fifth degree. The introduction of a model according to modern causal analysis and the interpretation of the dynamic development of the counterfactual outcomes are the secondary focuses of the study. A detailed discussion of causal assumptions and necessary control variables is needed to reveal the effect of unemployment on life satisfaction. The SOEP provides information about employment status on a monthly basis. This study shows possibilities for using this information for the construction of control groups and treatment groups and analyses with ideal episode patterns." (Author's abstract, IAB-Doku) ((en))

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    Something to Celebrate (or not): The Differing Impact of Promotion to Manager on the Job Satisfaction of Women and Men (2018)

    Lup, Daniela ;

    Zitatform

    Lup, Daniela (2018): Something to Celebrate (or not): The Differing Impact of Promotion to Manager on the Job Satisfaction of Women and Men. In: Work, employment and society, Jg. 32, H. 2, S. 407-425. DOI:10.1177/0950017017713932

    Abstract

    "The literatures on gender status stereotyping and the 'glass-ceiling' have shown that women managers have more difficult job experiences than men, but whether these experiences result in lower job satisfaction is still an open question. Using fixed-effects models in a longitudinal national sample, this study examines differences in job satisfaction between women and men promoted into lower and higher-level management, after controlling for key determinants of job satisfaction. Results indicate that promotions to management are accompanied by an increase in job satisfaction for men but not for women, and that the differing effect lasts beyond the promotion year. Moreover, following promotion, the job satisfaction of women promoted to higher-level management even starts declining. The type of promotion (internal or lateral) does not modify this effect. By clarifying the relationship between gender, promotion to managerial position and job satisfaction, the study contributes to the literature on the gender gap in managerial representation." (Author's abstract, IAB-Doku) ((en))

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    Labor mismatches: Effects on wages and on job satisfaction in 17 OECD countries (2018)

    Mateos-Romero, Lucía; del Mar Salinas-Jiménez, María;

    Zitatform

    Mateos-Romero, Lucía & María del Mar Salinas-Jiménez (2018): Labor mismatches: Effects on wages and on job satisfaction in 17 OECD countries. In: Social indicators research, Jg. 140, H. 1, S. 369-391. DOI:10.1007/s11205-017-1830-y

    Abstract

    "This study analyzes the effects of labor mismatches on wages and on job satisfaction in seventeen OECD countries by distinguishing between educational mismatch and skills mismatch. Using data from PIAAC, the results suggest that whereas educational mismatch shows greater effects on wages, the effects of labor mismatch on job satisfaction are generally better explained by skills mismatches. Both phenomena appear to be relevant for understanding the economic effects of labor mismatch and suggest that educational mismatch is not an accurate proxy for skills mismatch, mainly when the non-monetary effects of labor mismatch are addressed." (Author's abstract, © Springer-Verlag) ((en))

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    Wir entscheiden! (2018)

    Petry, Prof. Dr. Thorsten;

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    Petry, Prof. Dr. Thorsten (2018): Wir entscheiden! In: Personalmagazin, Jg. 20, H. 9, S. 31-33.

    Abstract

    "Mitarbeiter wollen sich direkt an Unternehmensentscheidungen und Führungsfragen beteiligen. Davon sind die meisten New Worker überzeugt. Doch inwiefern entspricht das tatsächlich dem Wunsch der Arbeitnehmer und wie weit sind die Unternehmen beim Einsatz von partizipativen Methoden? Eine aktuelle Studie der Hochschule Rhein-Main zeigt Antworten auf." (Autorenreferat, © Haufe-Lexware)

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    Job satisfaction in the "Big Four" of Europe: reasoning between feeling and uncertainty through CUB models (2018)

    Punzo, Gennaro ; Castellano, Rosalia; Buonocore, Mirko;

    Zitatform

    Punzo, Gennaro, Rosalia Castellano & Mirko Buonocore (2018): Job satisfaction in the "Big Four" of Europe. Reasoning between feeling and uncertainty through CUB models. In: Social indicators research, Jg. 139, H. 1, S. 205-236. DOI:10.1007/s11205-017-1715-0

    Abstract

    "The paper offers a comparative investigation of objective and subjective driving forces behind the satisfaction that people feel in their job in four representative countries of Western Europe. The main element of this work's novelty is its linking the research of cross-country similarities and differences in the leading determinants of global job satisfaction to methodological issues that arise when responses to survey questions are detected on a rating scale through self-evaluation. In particular, this paper is one of the first attempts to test the potentialities of CUB models on EWCS data in a broader conceptual framework in which the response on overall job satisfaction depends on some psychological dynamics of the evaluation process. Although overall job satisfaction is significantly higher for British and German employees, the subjective factors - the amount of socio-economic security embodied in a job, the working conditions and the aspects of work-life balance - are the most relevant in shaping job satisfaction, disregarding the myth that considers earnings as the dominant factor." (Author's abstract, © Springer-Verlag) ((en))

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    Does telework stress employees out?: a study on working at home and subjective well-being for wage/salary workers (2018)

    Song, Younghwan ; Gao, Jia;

    Zitatform

    Song, Younghwan & Jia Gao (2018): Does telework stress employees out? A study on working at home and subjective well-being for wage/salary workers. (IZA discussion paper 11993), Bonn, 28 S.

    Abstract

    "Using data from the 2010, 2012, and 2013 American Time Use Survey Well-Being Modules, this paper examines how subjective well-being (SWB) varies between working at home and working in the workplace among wage/salary workers. Both OLS and individual fixed-effects models are employed for estimation, and the results are largely consistent. In general, we find that working at home is associated with a lower level of net affect and a higher probability of having unpleasant feelings relative to working in the workplace. We further decompose homeworking into telework and bringing work home and find that the effect of SWB varies by types of homeworking. In comparison with working in the workplace, telework increases stress in both samples of weekdays and weekends/holidays, and it also reduces net affect and increases unpleasantness in the sample of weekends/ holidays. In contrast, bringing work home on weekdays results in a lower level of net affect due to less happiness received. The only positive effect of homeworking we discover is that telework reduces tiredness on weekdays. As to the existence of gender difference in the effect of homeworking, our OLS results show that working at home is associated with positive affections for males but negative affections for females. However, fixedeffects models suggest that both males and females feel more stressed when teleworking, indicating the existence of individual heterogeneity." (Author's abstract, IAB-Doku) ((en))

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    Work Orientations, Well-Being and Job Content of Self-Employed and Employed Professionals (2018)

    Warr, Peter; Inceoglu, Ilke;

    Zitatform

    Warr, Peter & Ilke Inceoglu (2018): Work Orientations, Well-Being and Job Content of Self-Employed and Employed Professionals. In: Work, employment and society, Jg. 32, H. 2, S. 292-311. DOI:10.1177/0950017017717684

    Abstract

    "Drawing on psychology-derived theories and methods, a questionnaire survey compared principal kinds of work orientation, job content and mental well-being between self-employed and organisationally employed professional workers. Self-employment was found to be particularly associated with energised well-being in the form of job engagement. The presence in self-employment of greater challenge, such as an enhanced requirement for personal innovation, accounted statistically for self-employed professionals' greater job engagement, and self-employed professionals more strongly valued personal challenge than did professionals employed in an organisation. However, no between-role differences occurred in respect of supportive job features such as having a comfortable workplace. Differences in well-being, job content and work orientations were found primarily in comparison between self-employees and organisational non-managers. The study emphasises the need to distinguish conceptually and empirically between different forms of work orientation, job content and well-being, and points to the value of incorporating psychological thinking in some sociological research." (Author's abstract, IAB-Doku) ((en))

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