不离开不满意的工作:分析女性、移民、老年和低学历雇员

Luuk Mandemakers, Eva Jaspers, Tanja van der Lippe
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引用次数: 0

摘要

目的在职业生涯中面临挑战的员工(即女性、移民、老年人和低学历员工)可能会认为求职成功的可能性较低,因此可能会更经常地留在不满意的岗位上。本研究的目标是发现这些员工在工作流动性方面的不平等现象。设计/方法/途径我们利用荷兰公共部门员工的大量样本(N = 30709),研究在职业生涯中面临挑战的员工是否会在将工作不满转化为求职时受到阻碍。此外,我们还评估了这是否是由于他们对劳动力市场其他选择的看法造成的。研究结果研究结果显示,非西方移民、老年人和低学历雇员与条件优越的同行相比,更不可能将对工作的不满转化为求职行动,而女性比男性更有可能这样做。此外,我们还发现,虽然他们认为劳动力市场机会有限,但这并不影响他们寻找不同工作的倾向。原创性/价值本文通过分析在职业生涯中面临挑战的员工是否不太可能对工作不满采取行动,从而更有可能继续留在不满意的岗位上,发现了工作流动中的不平等现象,具有新颖性。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Not leaving your unsatisfactory job: analyzing female, migrant, elderly and lower-educated employees
PurposeEmployees facing challenges in their careers – i.e. female, migrant, elderly and lower-educated employees – might expect job searches to have a low likelihood of success and might therefore more often stay in unsatisfactory positions. The goal of this study is to discover inequalities in job mobility for these employees.Design/methodology/approachWe rely on a large sample of Dutch public sector employees (N = 30,709) and study whether employees with challenges in their careers are hampered in translating job dissatisfaction into job searches. Additionally, we assess whether this is due to their perceptions of labor market alternatives.FindingsFindings show that non-Western migrant, elderly and lower-educated employees are less likely to act on job dissatisfaction than their advantaged counterparts, whereas women are more likely than men to do so. Additionally, we find that although they perceive labor market opportunities as limited, this does not affect their propensity to search for different jobs.Originality/valueThis paper is novel in discovering inequalities in job mobility by analyzing whether employees facing challenges in their careers are less likely to act on job dissatisfaction and therefore more likely to remain in unsatisfactory positions.
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