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Employability Market Orientation of Employee on the Gig Economy Labour Market (Zatrudnieniowa Orientacja Rynkowa pracownika na rynku pracy w warunkach gig economy)

Anna Pawlowska ()
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Anna Pawlowska: Faculty of Management, University of Warsaw

Problemy Zarzadzania, 2019, vol. 17, issue 86, 58-73

Abstract: The article addresses the situation of an employee functioning in the labour market in the conditions of digitisation, leading, amongst other, to the rise of a gig, platform and sharing economy. The employee is presented as an individual actively choosing from among new opportunities to create cooperation with the employer in terms of employment form and manner, duration and rules of work performance. The purpose of the described research was to check whether the employee who spots that the employer is undertaking actions that bespeak a transactional psychological contract and is therefore ready to change the employer activates Employability Market Orientation. In line with the adopted assumption, this attitude allows the employee to behave like a workpreneur and take full advantage of the opportunities offered in today’s labour market. The research has shown that in the sample examined, employees’ decision to change employers is not correlated with Employability Market Orientation. Many of them still decide to change employers due to low pay and low job security, which stems from the lack of a long-term contract. This may result from a passive attitude and a focus on seeking such a relation with the employer that is based on a relational psychological contract. This means that employees now find it difficult to seize new opportunities offered by modern technologies in the world of work. People who demonstrate cognitive flexibility are best predisposed to this.

Keywords: Employability Market Orientation; EMO questionnaire; gig economy; sharing economy; platform economy; transactional; relational psychological contract; employee; employer; job sharing; employee sharing (search for similar items in EconPapers)
JEL-codes: J53 J62 M54 (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2019
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