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RESEARCH PRODUCT
Job insecurity in the younger Spanish workforce: Causes and consequences
José M. PeiróAmparo CaballerBeatriz Sorasubject
Organizational Behavior and Human Resource ManagementLabour economicseducation.field_of_studyPopulationJob attitudeEmployabilityAffect (psychology)EducationJob securityUnderemploymentJob performanceWorkforceLife-span and Life-course StudieseducationPsychologyApplied Psychologydescription
Abstract The Spanish labor market is currently an example of a flexible labor market. However, it involves a set of detrimental conditions for its workforce, such as lower employability in the labor market and underemployment (i.e. over-qualification and underemployment in time). In this study, we assume that all these conditions promote higher job instability, which is especially serious for the younger population. Hence, the present study aims to examine, on the one hand, how these specific labor conditions affect younger employees' concerns about job loss or job insecurity and, on the other, how this job insecurity can affect their current job performance and the future development of their career. The study sample was composed of 3000 Spanish younger employees. Results showed a significant relationship between employability and underemployment and job insecurity, as well as a significant association between job insecurity and work involvement. Indeed, the relationship between employability and underemployment and work involvement was mediated by job insecurity. Lowemployable, overqualified and temporary young workers experience higher levels of job insecurity, which, in turn, negatively affects their work involvement.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2012-04-01 | Journal of Vocational Behavior |