1 / 37

Job Insecurity Part 2: Consequences & Moderators

Job Insecurity Part 2: Consequences & Moderators. Magnus Sverke Chair of Work and Organizational Psychology Department of Psychology, Stockholm University magnus.sverke@psychology.su.se. Content. History Why is job insecurity a problem? Definitions and measurements

kostya
Download Presentation

Job Insecurity Part 2: Consequences & Moderators

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Job InsecurityPart 2: Consequences & Moderators Magnus SverkeChair of Work and Organizational Psychology Department of Psychology, Stockholm University magnus.sverke@psychology.su.se

  2. Content • History • Why is job insecurity a problem? • Definitions and measurements • Prevalence: Are workers insecure? • Antecedents: What ‘causes’ insecurity? • Consequences for individuals, organisations and society? • What to do? Interventions and moderators • What to analyse in the future? Magnus Sverke magnus.sverke@psychology.su.se

  3. A Model Individual characteristics (e.g., age, gender, personality, employability) Consequences Job insecurity perceptions ”Objective” work situation Organizational and social factors (e.g., social support, information, turbulence) Magnus Sverke magnus.sverke@psychology.su.se

  4. 6. Consequences • Type of consequence? • Psychological, Somatic, Behavioral(e.g., Jex & Beehr, 1991; Spector, 2000) • For whom? • Individual, Organization, Union, Family(e.g., Matteson & Ivancevich, 1987; Sverke et al., 2004; Westman et al., 2001) • When does it occur? • Short-term vs. Long-term(e.g., Spector, 2000; Katz & Kahn, 1978; Zapf, Dormann & Frese, 1996) Magnus Sverke magnus.sverke@psychology.su.se

  5. A (Limited) Typology Focus of reaction Sverke, Hellgren & Näswall, 2002 Individual Organizational Job satisfaction Job involvement Org. commitment Trust Immediate Performance Turnover Long-term Physical health Mental health Magnus Sverke magnus.sverke@psychology.su.se

  6. Meta-analysis • Accumulate results from independent studies • Aim: arrive at reliable (average) estimates of relationships in the population • Highlight similarities and inconsistencies that are more difficult to find in narrative reviews • Correction for • Measurement reliability • Sampling error Magnus Sverke magnus.sverke@psychology.su.se

  7. Meta-analysis results Magnus Sverke magnus.sverke@psychology.su.se

  8. Consequences for individual health and well-being • Mental and physical health (De Witte, 1999) • Anxiety & depression (Orpen, 1993) • Burnout (Dekker & Schaufeli, 1995) • Life dissatisfaction (Lim, 1996) • High blood pressure (Burchell, 1994) • Use of medical services (Roskies & Louis-Guerin, 1990) • Occurrence of ischaemic heart disease (Siegrist et al., 1990) Magnus Sverke magnus.sverke@psychology.su.se

  9. b. Consequences for organisations • Job satisfaction (Ashford et al., 1989) • Job involvement (Kuhnert & Palmer, 1991) • Organizational commitment (Armstron-Stassen, 1993) • Trust in management (Borg & Elizur, 1992) • Turnover intention (Hellgren et al., 1999) • Performance (Rosenblatt et al., 1999) • Safety behavior (Probst & Brubaker, 2001) • Absenteeism, tardiness (Probst, 1999) Magnus Sverke magnus.sverke@psychology.su.se

  10. c. Consequences for unions • Job insecurity is a strong motive for joining unions • Psychological contract with the union • Unions protect employment security • If the union fails at protecting job security, members can hold the union responsible • Breach of a psychological contract with the union • Members respond with impaired union attitudes Mellor, 1992; Sverke et al., 2004; De Witte et al., 2008 Magnus Sverke magnus.sverke@psychology.su.se

  11. Negative Reduced union loyalty and increased willingness to resign from union membership(Sverke & Goslinga, 2003) Reduction in perceived union support(De Witte et al, 2008) Tendency to blame the union (Mellor, 1992) Low perceptions of possibilities to influence the situation via the union (Petersson & Isaksson, 2002) Positive Increase in intention to become a member among non-members(De Witte, 2000) Increase in union membership (Bender & Sloane, 1999) Higherwillingness to participate in actions – but only when related to the goal of ‘reducing insecurity’(van Vuuren, 1990) Consequences for unions Magnus Sverke magnus.sverke@psychology.su.se

  12. d. Consequences for life outside work • Work–family conflict (Kinnunen & Mauno, 1998; Voydanoff, 2004) • Crossover to partner (Westman et al., 2001) • Marital dysfunctioning (Barling & McEwen, 1992) • Effects on children’s work beliefs and attitudes (Barling et al., 1998) and school performance (Barling & Mendelson, 1999) Magnus Sverke magnus.sverke@psychology.su.se

  13. Problems of inferring causality • Cross-sectional designs • No temporal difference • No control for prior levels • Mono-method bias • Inflated correlations? • Third variable problem • Spurious effects? Magnus Sverke magnus.sverke@psychology.su.se

  14. The Causality Problem Job Insecurity Time 1 Job Insecurity Time 2 Well-being Time 1 Well-being Time 2 Magnus Sverke magnus.sverke@psychology.su.se

  15. Causal mechanisms: Some evidence • Job insecurity related to strain and dissatisfaction even after other work stressors were controlled for(De Witte,1999; De Witte et al., in press) • Job insecurity predicts “outcomes” after controlling for initial levels (Hellgren, Sverke, & Isaksson, 1999) • Job insecurity affects well-being negatively over time – chronic stressor (Garst, Frese, & Molenaar, 2000) • Cross-lagged analyses show that job insecurity predicts subsequent mental health complaints rather than vice versa – support for the direction of causality (Hellgren & Sverke, 2003) Magnus Sverke magnus.sverke@psychology.su.se

  16. 3 3 1 2 2 1 3 2 1 2 1 3 2 2 3 1 1 3 Hellgren & Sverke, 2003 .34 .69 .25 .28 .63 .24 Gender (man) -.08ns Job Insecurity T1 .49 Job Insecurity T2 .92 .74 -.16 .00 ns -.12 .04 ns .02 ns Age .36 .54 .24 .45 .50 .27 .01 ns .01 ns -.26 .35 -.01 ns .15 -.11 ns Org tenure .18 .16 .07ns Mental Health Compl T1 .30 Mental Health Compl T2 .05 ns .89 .50 Family status (married) -.16 .62 .28 -.07 ns .63 .04 ns -.11 ns Physical Health Compl T1 Physical Health Compl T2 Education (university) .95 .78 -.11 ns .38 .29 .35 .45 .35 .32 .45 Magnus Sverke magnus.sverke@psychology.su.se

  17. Sverke et al., APA/NIOSH, 2008 Quantitative Insecurity Quantitative Insecurity .08 Qualitative Insecurity Qualitative Insecurity .09 Age, Gender, Tenure, Full-time, Temp, Somatic complaints Absenteeism Absenteeism Presenteeism Presenteeism Not shown: Factor correlations within time; effects of control variables Magnus Sverke magnus.sverke@psychology.su.se

  18. 7. How to reduce the negative consequences of job insecurity? • Moderators • Interventions (are there any?) Clearly another ‘missing issue’ in research… Magnus Sverke magnus.sverke@psychology.su.se

  19. Why not show a nice picture many times? Individual characteristics (e.g., age, gender, personality, employability) Consequences Job insecurity perceptions ”Objective” work situation Organizational and social factors (e.g., social support, information, turbulence) Magnus Sverke magnus.sverke@psychology.su.se

  20. What can the individual do? Emotion focus Problem focus Social support Magnus Sverke magnus.sverke@psychology.su.se

  21. Potential moderators Family situation Education / status Dispositions & coping Social support Justice & participation Union membership Conse- quences Jobinsecurity Magnus Sverke magnus.sverke@psychology.su.se

  22. a. Individual Differences Perspective • Locus of control, attribution, need for security, affectivity, etc • Negative affectivity, positive affectivity, and locus of control were tested as moderators of job insecurity – strain relation. Only external locus of control was associated with higher level of mental health complaints (Näswall, Sverke, & Hellgren, 2005a) Magnus Sverke magnus.sverke@psychology.su.se

  23. b. Demographic Perspective • Employment contract, gender, family status, breadwinner, occupational status, education • “Consequences” of job insecurity more negative for permanent than temporary workers (De Cuyper & De Witte, 2006; De Witte & Näswall, 2003) • More negative efffects among blue-collar workers (Sverke et al., 2002) Magnus Sverke magnus.sverke@psychology.su.se

  24. c. Resource Perspective • Employability, control, coping • Control mitigated the negative effects of job insecurity (Barling & Kelloway, 1996) Magnus Sverke magnus.sverke@psychology.su.se

  25. d. Fairness Perspective • Justice • Information • Participation • Commitment to change Sverke et al., 2008 Magnus Sverke magnus.sverke@psychology.su.se

  26. e. Social Support Perspective • Nonwork-based (family, friendss • Lower levels of family-based social support were associated with more negative reactions to job insecurity (mental and somatic health complaints) (Näswall et al., 2005b) • Work-based (organization, coworkers, union) • Union support only occasionally buffered the negative effects of job insecurity on individual and organizational consequences (Sverke et al., 2004) Magnus Sverke magnus.sverke@psychology.su.se

  27. One example of a model Moderators • Individual differences • Fair treatment • Social support Objective situation • Labor market characteristics • Organizational change • Employment contract • Uncertain future for the organization Consequences • Well-being • Job attitudes • Organizational attitudes • Behavior Job insecurity • Threats of job loss • Threats to job features Subjective characteristics • Perceived employability • Perceived control • Family responsibility • Need for security Sverke & Hellgren, 2002 Magnus Sverke magnus.sverke@psychology.su.se

  28. Brief Summary • Job insecurity has a wide variety of potential consequences • Some support for effects over time • Personality not very important in explaining reactions to job insecurity • Alleviating factors, such as social support and possibilities to increase employability, should be available to employees • Job insecurity is a work environment problem – and, hence, an issue of managerial responsibility Magnus Sverke magnus.sverke@psychology.su.se

  29. Task • Design the basic characteristics of an intervention to reduce the negative effects of job insecurity Magnus Sverke magnus.sverke@psychology.su.se

  30. 8. Further research ‘We need more research on this topic’ Magnus Sverke magnus.sverke@psychology.su.se

  31. a. Broaden our focus • Impact of different measures of job insecurity (e.g.: objective-subjective; cognitive-affective; quantitative-qualitative; short-long term, … ) • Impact of job insecurity on ‘forgotten’ outcomes: • consequences for families (partner, children,…) • consequences for companies: performance, absenteeism • union attitudes and participation • consequences for society (attitudes, political,…) Magnus Sverke magnus.sverke@psychology.su.se

  32. b. Cross-national comparisons • generalise previous findings? • compare prevalence levels of insecurity: JI due to the ‘objective situation’? • explore country specific characteristics as e.g. antecedents (e.g. multi-level analysis) • check whether countries moderate the relationship insecurity – outcomes (social protection) Magnus Sverke magnus.sverke@psychology.su.se

  33. c. Gain more in-depth knowledge • Elaborate and test theoretical explanations regarding: • Antecedents • Consequences • Relative impact of job insecurity compared to other work-related stressors and life outside work • Impact of moderators: • On antecedents of JI • On consequences of JI • Who suffers more from job insecurity? • Longitudinal analyses: causation? Magnus Sverke magnus.sverke@psychology.su.se

  34. Development of stress reactions? Frese & Zapf, 1988 Zapf, Dormann & Frese, 1996 reaction stressor Stress reaction model Accumulation model Dynamic Accumulation model Adjustment model Sleeper effect model Magnus Sverke magnus.sverke@psychology.su.se

  35. d. Prevention and Intervention Develop ways to • reduce job insecurity and • to cope with it • Develop and test interventions (e.g. communication, participation,…) • Will workers adjust to “constant turmoil”? • Can insecurity at all be avoided? Magnus Sverke magnus.sverke@psychology.su.se

  36. Read more? Sverke, M., Hellgren, J., Näswall, K., Chirumbolo, A., De Witte, H., & Goslinga, S. (2004). Job insecurity and union membership: European unions in the wake of flexible production. Brussels: P.I.E.-Peter Lang. Sverke, M. (2003). Uncertain employment relations and union membership in Europe. Special issue of Economic and Industrial Democracy (Vol. 24, Issue 2, 2003). Sverke, M., Hellgren, J., & Näswall, K. (2002). No security: A meta-analysis and review of job insecurity and its consequences. Journal of Occupational Health Psychology, 7, 242–264. Sverke, M. & Hellgren, J. (2002). The nature of job insecurity: Understanding employment uncertainty on the brink of a new Millennium. Applied Psychology: An International Review, 51, 23-42. Magnus Sverke magnus.sverke@psychology.su.se

  37. Magnus Sverke www.psychology.su.semse@psychology.su.se

More Related