Job Satisfaction Over the Life Course

David G. Blanchflower, A. Bryson
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引用次数: 2

Abstract

We examine the relationship between union membership and job satisfaction over the life-course using data from the National Child Development Study (NCDS) tracking all those born in Great Britain in a single week in March in 1958 through to age 55 (2013). Data from immigrants as well as non-respondents to the original 1958 Perinatal Mortality Study (PMS) are added in later years. Conditioning on one’s social class at birth, together with one’s education and employment status, we find there is a significant negative correlation between union membership and job satisfaction that is apparent across the life-course. Lagged union membership status going back many years is negatively correlated with current job satisfaction, though its effects become statistically non-significant when conditioning on current union membership status. These results provide a different perspective to longitudinal studies showing short-term positive responses to switches in membership status. They are consistent with earlier work showing that this cohort of workers, and others before them, have persistently lower job satisfaction as union members compared to their non-union counterparts.
职业满意度贯穿一生
我们使用国家儿童发展研究(NCDS)的数据来研究工会会员资格和工作满意度之间的关系,该研究追踪了1958年3月的一周内出生在英国的所有人,直到55岁(2013年)。来自移民的数据以及1958年围产期死亡率研究(PMS)的非应答者的数据在后来的年份被添加。根据一个人出生时的社会阶层、受教育程度和就业状况,我们发现工会会员资格与工作满意度之间存在显著的负相关,这种负相关在整个生命过程中都很明显。多年前落后的工会会员身份与当前的工作满意度呈负相关,尽管当以当前的工会会员身份为条件时,其影响在统计上不显著。这些结果为纵向研究提供了不同的视角,显示了成员身份转换的短期积极反应。他们与早期的研究一致,表明这群工人,以及在他们之前的其他人,作为工会成员,与非工会成员相比,工作满意度持续较低。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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