Employment Quality as a Health Determinant: Empirical Evidence for the Waged and Self-Employed

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Abstract

In this study, the authors investigate the health associations of different employment arrangements in the contemporary European labor market. In doing so, a new approach based on the concept of “employment quality” is introduced. Employment quality refers to the multiple dimensions characterizing the employment situation of wage- and self-employed (European Working Conditions Survey 2015 – N = 31,929). Latent class cluster analyses were applied to construct an overarching typology of employment quality for the waged and self-employed. Using logistic regression analyses, strong associations were found with mental well-being and self-reported general health, pointing at a disadvantaged situation for the most precarious employment arrangements. The study shows that employment quality should be taken seriously as a health determinant both among waged workers and the self-employed. Our (novel) holistic approach offers an alternative to current analyses of the health associates of labor market segmentation that were criticized for being overly simplistic and amounting to inconclusive findings.

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APA

Gevaert, J., Van Aerden, K., De Moortel, D., & Vanroelen, C. (2021). Employment Quality as a Health Determinant: Empirical Evidence for the Waged and Self-Employed. Work and Occupations, 48(2), 146–183. https://doi.org/10.1177/0730888420946436

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