Workers’ Lifestyle Choices, Working Time and Job Attributes
Giovanni Russo and
Edwin van Hooft
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Giovanni Russo: CEDEFOP
Edwin van Hooft: University of Amsterdam
Chapter 11 in Non-Standard Employment and Quality of Work. The Case of Italy, 2012, pp 205-229 from AIEL - Associazione Italiana Economisti del Lavoro
Abstract:
The Netherlands has been dubbed “the only part-time economy” (Freeman 1998). This expression reflects the popularity of part-time jobs in the country, particularly among working women. The purpose of this study is to explore whether workers who prefer part-time work differ from their full-time counterparts. It also investigates whether the observed differences sustain a part-time wage gap, doing so by analysing data on self-reported preferences for desired job attributes collected in the Netherlands in 2001. The results of this analysis show that part-time workers differ from their full-time counterparts in one respect: they place more emphasis on working-time flexibility than do full-time workers. However, if firms’ incentive schemes (career and training) make additional demands on workers’ time, time-constrained part-time workers will respond to them less effectively than full-time workers. In so far as firms use this information to allocate their training and promotion opportunities among their workforce, part-time workers forgo career opportunities more often than their full-time counterparts. Consequently, part-time employment spells will have long-term effects on workers’ wages.
Keywords: part-time; job satisfaction; wage gap. (search for similar items in EconPapers)
JEL-codes: J22 J28 J41 (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2012
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