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The Work-Life Conflict and Well-Being of Turkish Employees

Year 2014, Volume: 3 Issue: 1, 57 - 76, 01.01.2014

Abstract

Using data drawn from the 2004 European Social Survey, we examine the determinants of the life satisfaction of employees in Turkey. The data reveal that the majority of Turkish wage and salary earners are either under- or overemployed. About half of Turkish workers have to work longer than they desire, so, unsurprisingly, the share of workers who say they are pleased with their work schedules is only 22%. Gender turns out to be closely linked with the hours-mismatch status, as the level of over-employment is eight percentage points higher among female workers than male. Ordered probit-model estimates reveal that over-employment (measured as the difference in the actual and preferred weekly number of hours) has a negative impact on wellbeing. We failed to turn up a statistically significant finding for underemployment, which we attribute to the small sample size. We also find no statistically meaningful difference in the impact on male versus female employees
of the work-hours mismatch. This suggests that the gender differences that would have been expected in this context are already incorporated into the respondents' subjectively determined desired hours of work. In addition, we find that family-to-work conflict is less common, but has a larger impact on well-being than work-to-family conflict.

References

  • Alesina, Alberto, Rafael Di Tella, and Robert MacCulloch, (2004), “Inequality and happiness: Are Europeans and Americans different?”, Journal of Public Economics, 88 (9-10), pp. 2009–2042.
  • Albert, Cecilia and Maria A. Davia, (2005), “Education, wages, and job satisfaction,” Paper presented at the Epunet-2005 Conference, Colchester, UK.
  • Baslevent, Cem and Hasan Kirmanoğlu, (2014), “The impact of deviations from desired hours of work on the life satisfaction of employees,” Social Indicators Research, 118 (1), pp. 33-43.
  • Becchetti, Leonardo, Stefano Castriota, and David A. Londoño Bedoya, (2006) ,“Climate, happiness, and the Kyoto Protocol: Someone does not like it hot,” CEIS Working Paper, No: 247.
  • Bell, Linda A. and Richard B. Freeman, (2001), “The incentive for working hard: explaining hours-worked differences in the US and Germany,” Labour Economics, 8 (2), pp. 181-202.
  • Blanchflower, David G. and Andrew J. Oswald, (2004), “Money, sex, and happiness: an empirical study,” Scandinavian Journal of Economics, 106 (3), pp. 393-415.
  • Blanchflower, David G. and Andrew J. Oswald, (2008), “Is well-being Ushaped over the life cycle?”, Social Science & Medicine, 66 (8), pp. 1733-1749.
  • Boye, Katarina, (2009), “Relatively Different? How do Gender Differences in Well-Being Depend on Paid and Unpaid Work in Europe?,” Social Indicators Research, 93 (3), pp. 509-525.
  • Böheim, Rene and Mark P. Taylor, (2004), “Actual and preferred working hours,” British Journal of Industrial Relations, 42(1), pp. 149-166.
  • Clark, Andrew E,(1997), “Job satisfaction and gender: why are women so happy at work?”, Labor Economics, 4 (4), pp. 341-372.
  • Clark, Andrew E, (2005), “What makes a good job? Evidence from OECD countries,” in: S. Bazen, C. Lucifora, W. Salverda (eds.), Job Quality and Employer Behavior. Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan, pp. 11-30.
  • Clark, Andrew E. and Andrew J. Oswald, (1994), “Unhappiness and unemployment,” The Economic Journal, 104 (424), pp. 648-659.
  • Coltrane, Scott, (2000), “Research on household labor: modeling and measuring the social embeddedness of routine family work,” Journal of Marriage and the Family, 62 (4), pp. 1208-1233.
  • Cuñado, Juncal and Fernando Pérez de Gracia, (2012), “Does education affect happiness? Evidence for Spain,” Social Indicators Research, 108 (1),pp 18 5-196.
  • Dickens, William T. and Shelly J. Lundberg, (1993), “Hours restrictions and labor supply,” International Economic Review, 34 (1), pp. 169-192.
  • Easterlin, Richard A, (1974), “Does economic growth improve the human lot? Some Empirical Evidence,” in: P.A. David and M.W. Reder (eds.), Nations and Households in Economic Growth: Essays in Honor of Moses Abramovitz. New York: Academic Press, pp. 89-125.
  • Easterlin, Richard A, (2001), “Life-cycle welfare: trends and differences,” Journal of Happiness Studies, 2 (1), pp. 1-12.
  • European Socail Survey, (2004), http://ess.nsd.uib.no/ess/round2/
  • Euwals, Rob and Arthur van Soest, (1999), “Desired and actual labour supply of unmarried men and women in the Netherlands,” Labour Economics, 6 (1), pp. 95-118.
  • Frankenhaeuser, Marianne, Ulf Lundberg, Mats Fredrikson, Bo Melin, Martti Tuomisto, Anna-Lisa Myrsten, et al., (1989), “Stress on and off the job as related to sex and occupational-status in white-collar workers,” Journal of Organizational Behavior, 10 (4), pp. 321-346.
  • Frey, Bruno S. and Alois Stutzer, (2002), Happiness and Economics. Princeton University Press, Princeton.
  • Frone, Michael R., Marcia Russell, and M. Lynne Cooper, (1992), “Antecedents and outcomes of work-family conflict: testing a model of the work-family interface,” Journal of Applied Psychology, 77, pp. 65-78.
  • Gareis, Karen C., Rosalind C. Barnett, Karen A. Ertel, Lisa F. Berkman, (2009), “Work-Family Enrichment and Conflict: Addi-tive Effects, Buffering, or Balance?”, Journal of Marriage and Family, 71 (3), pp. 696-707.
  • Glass, Jennifer, and Tetsushi Fujimoto, (1994), “Housework, paid work, and depression among husbands and wives,” Journal of Health and Social Behavior, 35 (2), pp. 179-191.
  • Grözinger, Gerd, Wenzel Matiaske, and Verena Tobsch, (2008), “Arbeitszeitwünsche, Arbeitslosigkeit, und Arbeitszeitpolitik,” SOEP Papers, No. 103, DIW Berlin.
  • Gutek, Barbara A., Sabrina Searle, and Lilian Klepa, (1991), “Rational versus gender-role explanations for work-family conflict,” Journal of Applied Psychology, 76 (4), pp. 560-568.
  • Hayo, Bernd, (2004), “Happiness in Eastern Europe,” Marburg Working Papers on Economics 200412, Philipps-Universität Marburg.
  • Heineck, Guido and Joachim Möller, (2012), “Geschlechtsspezifisches Arbeitsmarktverhalten, Verdienste und Wohlbefinden im Familienkontext”, in: H. Bertram and M. Bujard (eds), Zeit, Geld, Infrastruktur – zur Zukunft der Familienpolitik, Soziale Welt – Sonderband 19, Nomos, Baden-Baden.
  • Holly, Sarah and Alwine Mohnen, (2012), “Impact of working hours on work–life balance,” SOEP Papers, No. 471, DIW Berlin.
  • Hooker, Karen and Ilene C. Siegler, (1993), “Life goals, satisfaction, and selfrated health: Preliminary Findings,” Experimental Aging Research, 19 (1), pp. 97-110.
  • Jacobs, Jerry A. and Kathleen Gerson, (2004), The time divide: Work, family, and gender inequality. Cambridge: Harvard University Press.
  • Karasek, Robert, Bertil Gardell, and Jan Lindell, (1987), “Work and nonwork correlates of illness and behavior in male and female Swedish white-collar workers,” Journal of Occupational Behavior, 8 (3), pp. 187-207.
  • McBride, Michael, (2001), “Relative-income effects on subjective well-being in the cross-section,” Journal of Economic Behavior & Organization, 45 (3), pp. 251-278.
  • McDonough, Peggy and Vivienne Walters, (2001), “Gender and health: reassessing patterns and explanations,” Social Science and Medicine, 52 (4), pp. 547-559.
  • Mirowsky, John and Catherine E. Ross, (1995), “Sex differences in distress— real or artifact,” American Sociological Review, 60 (3), pp. 449-468.
  • OECD, (2010), “Labour Force Statistics: Summary tables,” OECD Employment and Labour Market Statistics (database). http://dx.doi.org/10.1787/data-00286-en; and Swiss Federal Statistics Office.
  • Okun, Morris A., William A. Stock, Marilyn J. Haring, and Robert A. Witter, (1984), “Health and subjective well-being: a meta-analysis,” International Journal of Aging and Human Development, 19 (2), pp. 111-132.
  • Peck, Michael D. and Joseph R. Merighi, (2007), “The relation of social comparison to subjective well-being and health status in older adults,” Journal of Human Behavior in the Social Environment, 16 (3), pp. 121-142.
  • Reynolds, Jeremy, (2004), “When too much is not enough: actual and preferred work hours in the United States and abroad,” Sociological Forum, 19 (1), pp. 89-120.
  • Reynolds, Jeremy and Lydia Aletraris, (2006), “Pursuing Preferences: The Creation and Resolution of Work-Hour Mismatches,” American Sociological Review, 71 (4), pp. 618-638. Roxburgh, Susan, (2004), “‘There just aren’t enough hours in the day’: the mental-health consequences of time pressure,” Journal of Health and Social Behavior, 45 (2), pp. 115-131.
  • Stewart, Mark B. and Joanna K. Swaffield, (1997), “Constraints on the desired hours of work of British men,” Economic Journal, 107 (441), pp. 520-535.
  • Stier, Haya and Noah Lewin-Epstein, (2003), “Time to Work: A Comparative Analysis of Preferences for Working Hours,” Work and Occupations, 30 (3), pp. 302-326.
  • Voydanoff, Patricia, (2005), “Work Demands and Work-to-Family and Family-to-Work Conflict: Direct and Indirect Relationships,” Journal of Family Issues, 26 (6), pp. 707-726.
  • Wooden, Mark, Diana Warren, and Robert Drago, (2009), “Working-time mismatch and subjective well-being,” British Journal of Industrial Relations, 47 (1), pp. 147-179.
  • Wunder, Christoph and Guido Heineck, (2013), “Working-time preferences, hours mismatch, and well-being of couples: are there spillovers?”, Labour Economics, 24 (October), pp. 244-252.
  • Yang, Yang, (2008), “Social inequalities in happiness in the United States, 1972 to 2004: an age-period-cohort analysis,” American Sociological Review, 73 (2), pp. 204-226.

The Work-Life Conflict and Well-Being of Turkish Employees

Year 2014, Volume: 3 Issue: 1, 57 - 76, 01.01.2014

Abstract

Using data drawn from the 2004 European Social Survey, we examine the determinants of the life satisfaction of employees in Turkey. The data reveal that the majority of Turkish wage and salary earners are either under- or overemployed. About half of Turkish workers have to work longer than they desire, so, unsurprisingly, the share of workers who say they are pleased with their work schedules is only 22%. Gender turns out to be closely linked with the hours-mismatch status, as the level of over-employment is eight percentage points higher among female workers than male. Ordered probit-model estimates reveal that over-employment (measured as the difference in the actual and preferred weekly number of hours) has a negative impact on wellbeing. We failed to turn up a statistically significant finding for underemployment, which we attribute to the small sample size. We also find no statistically meaningful difference in the impact on male versus female employees
of the work-hours mismatch. This suggests that the gender differences that would have been expected in this context are already incorporated into the respondents' subjectively determined desired hours of work. In addition, we find that family-to-work conflict is less common, but has a larger impact on well-being than work-to-family conflict.

References

  • Alesina, Alberto, Rafael Di Tella, and Robert MacCulloch, (2004), “Inequality and happiness: Are Europeans and Americans different?”, Journal of Public Economics, 88 (9-10), pp. 2009–2042.
  • Albert, Cecilia and Maria A. Davia, (2005), “Education, wages, and job satisfaction,” Paper presented at the Epunet-2005 Conference, Colchester, UK.
  • Baslevent, Cem and Hasan Kirmanoğlu, (2014), “The impact of deviations from desired hours of work on the life satisfaction of employees,” Social Indicators Research, 118 (1), pp. 33-43.
  • Becchetti, Leonardo, Stefano Castriota, and David A. Londoño Bedoya, (2006) ,“Climate, happiness, and the Kyoto Protocol: Someone does not like it hot,” CEIS Working Paper, No: 247.
  • Bell, Linda A. and Richard B. Freeman, (2001), “The incentive for working hard: explaining hours-worked differences in the US and Germany,” Labour Economics, 8 (2), pp. 181-202.
  • Blanchflower, David G. and Andrew J. Oswald, (2004), “Money, sex, and happiness: an empirical study,” Scandinavian Journal of Economics, 106 (3), pp. 393-415.
  • Blanchflower, David G. and Andrew J. Oswald, (2008), “Is well-being Ushaped over the life cycle?”, Social Science & Medicine, 66 (8), pp. 1733-1749.
  • Boye, Katarina, (2009), “Relatively Different? How do Gender Differences in Well-Being Depend on Paid and Unpaid Work in Europe?,” Social Indicators Research, 93 (3), pp. 509-525.
  • Böheim, Rene and Mark P. Taylor, (2004), “Actual and preferred working hours,” British Journal of Industrial Relations, 42(1), pp. 149-166.
  • Clark, Andrew E,(1997), “Job satisfaction and gender: why are women so happy at work?”, Labor Economics, 4 (4), pp. 341-372.
  • Clark, Andrew E, (2005), “What makes a good job? Evidence from OECD countries,” in: S. Bazen, C. Lucifora, W. Salverda (eds.), Job Quality and Employer Behavior. Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan, pp. 11-30.
  • Clark, Andrew E. and Andrew J. Oswald, (1994), “Unhappiness and unemployment,” The Economic Journal, 104 (424), pp. 648-659.
  • Coltrane, Scott, (2000), “Research on household labor: modeling and measuring the social embeddedness of routine family work,” Journal of Marriage and the Family, 62 (4), pp. 1208-1233.
  • Cuñado, Juncal and Fernando Pérez de Gracia, (2012), “Does education affect happiness? Evidence for Spain,” Social Indicators Research, 108 (1),pp 18 5-196.
  • Dickens, William T. and Shelly J. Lundberg, (1993), “Hours restrictions and labor supply,” International Economic Review, 34 (1), pp. 169-192.
  • Easterlin, Richard A, (1974), “Does economic growth improve the human lot? Some Empirical Evidence,” in: P.A. David and M.W. Reder (eds.), Nations and Households in Economic Growth: Essays in Honor of Moses Abramovitz. New York: Academic Press, pp. 89-125.
  • Easterlin, Richard A, (2001), “Life-cycle welfare: trends and differences,” Journal of Happiness Studies, 2 (1), pp. 1-12.
  • European Socail Survey, (2004), http://ess.nsd.uib.no/ess/round2/
  • Euwals, Rob and Arthur van Soest, (1999), “Desired and actual labour supply of unmarried men and women in the Netherlands,” Labour Economics, 6 (1), pp. 95-118.
  • Frankenhaeuser, Marianne, Ulf Lundberg, Mats Fredrikson, Bo Melin, Martti Tuomisto, Anna-Lisa Myrsten, et al., (1989), “Stress on and off the job as related to sex and occupational-status in white-collar workers,” Journal of Organizational Behavior, 10 (4), pp. 321-346.
  • Frey, Bruno S. and Alois Stutzer, (2002), Happiness and Economics. Princeton University Press, Princeton.
  • Frone, Michael R., Marcia Russell, and M. Lynne Cooper, (1992), “Antecedents and outcomes of work-family conflict: testing a model of the work-family interface,” Journal of Applied Psychology, 77, pp. 65-78.
  • Gareis, Karen C., Rosalind C. Barnett, Karen A. Ertel, Lisa F. Berkman, (2009), “Work-Family Enrichment and Conflict: Addi-tive Effects, Buffering, or Balance?”, Journal of Marriage and Family, 71 (3), pp. 696-707.
  • Glass, Jennifer, and Tetsushi Fujimoto, (1994), “Housework, paid work, and depression among husbands and wives,” Journal of Health and Social Behavior, 35 (2), pp. 179-191.
  • Grözinger, Gerd, Wenzel Matiaske, and Verena Tobsch, (2008), “Arbeitszeitwünsche, Arbeitslosigkeit, und Arbeitszeitpolitik,” SOEP Papers, No. 103, DIW Berlin.
  • Gutek, Barbara A., Sabrina Searle, and Lilian Klepa, (1991), “Rational versus gender-role explanations for work-family conflict,” Journal of Applied Psychology, 76 (4), pp. 560-568.
  • Hayo, Bernd, (2004), “Happiness in Eastern Europe,” Marburg Working Papers on Economics 200412, Philipps-Universität Marburg.
  • Heineck, Guido and Joachim Möller, (2012), “Geschlechtsspezifisches Arbeitsmarktverhalten, Verdienste und Wohlbefinden im Familienkontext”, in: H. Bertram and M. Bujard (eds), Zeit, Geld, Infrastruktur – zur Zukunft der Familienpolitik, Soziale Welt – Sonderband 19, Nomos, Baden-Baden.
  • Holly, Sarah and Alwine Mohnen, (2012), “Impact of working hours on work–life balance,” SOEP Papers, No. 471, DIW Berlin.
  • Hooker, Karen and Ilene C. Siegler, (1993), “Life goals, satisfaction, and selfrated health: Preliminary Findings,” Experimental Aging Research, 19 (1), pp. 97-110.
  • Jacobs, Jerry A. and Kathleen Gerson, (2004), The time divide: Work, family, and gender inequality. Cambridge: Harvard University Press.
  • Karasek, Robert, Bertil Gardell, and Jan Lindell, (1987), “Work and nonwork correlates of illness and behavior in male and female Swedish white-collar workers,” Journal of Occupational Behavior, 8 (3), pp. 187-207.
  • McBride, Michael, (2001), “Relative-income effects on subjective well-being in the cross-section,” Journal of Economic Behavior & Organization, 45 (3), pp. 251-278.
  • McDonough, Peggy and Vivienne Walters, (2001), “Gender and health: reassessing patterns and explanations,” Social Science and Medicine, 52 (4), pp. 547-559.
  • Mirowsky, John and Catherine E. Ross, (1995), “Sex differences in distress— real or artifact,” American Sociological Review, 60 (3), pp. 449-468.
  • OECD, (2010), “Labour Force Statistics: Summary tables,” OECD Employment and Labour Market Statistics (database). http://dx.doi.org/10.1787/data-00286-en; and Swiss Federal Statistics Office.
  • Okun, Morris A., William A. Stock, Marilyn J. Haring, and Robert A. Witter, (1984), “Health and subjective well-being: a meta-analysis,” International Journal of Aging and Human Development, 19 (2), pp. 111-132.
  • Peck, Michael D. and Joseph R. Merighi, (2007), “The relation of social comparison to subjective well-being and health status in older adults,” Journal of Human Behavior in the Social Environment, 16 (3), pp. 121-142.
  • Reynolds, Jeremy, (2004), “When too much is not enough: actual and preferred work hours in the United States and abroad,” Sociological Forum, 19 (1), pp. 89-120.
  • Reynolds, Jeremy and Lydia Aletraris, (2006), “Pursuing Preferences: The Creation and Resolution of Work-Hour Mismatches,” American Sociological Review, 71 (4), pp. 618-638. Roxburgh, Susan, (2004), “‘There just aren’t enough hours in the day’: the mental-health consequences of time pressure,” Journal of Health and Social Behavior, 45 (2), pp. 115-131.
  • Stewart, Mark B. and Joanna K. Swaffield, (1997), “Constraints on the desired hours of work of British men,” Economic Journal, 107 (441), pp. 520-535.
  • Stier, Haya and Noah Lewin-Epstein, (2003), “Time to Work: A Comparative Analysis of Preferences for Working Hours,” Work and Occupations, 30 (3), pp. 302-326.
  • Voydanoff, Patricia, (2005), “Work Demands and Work-to-Family and Family-to-Work Conflict: Direct and Indirect Relationships,” Journal of Family Issues, 26 (6), pp. 707-726.
  • Wooden, Mark, Diana Warren, and Robert Drago, (2009), “Working-time mismatch and subjective well-being,” British Journal of Industrial Relations, 47 (1), pp. 147-179.
  • Wunder, Christoph and Guido Heineck, (2013), “Working-time preferences, hours mismatch, and well-being of couples: are there spillovers?”, Labour Economics, 24 (October), pp. 244-252.
  • Yang, Yang, (2008), “Social inequalities in happiness in the United States, 1972 to 2004: an age-period-cohort analysis,” American Sociological Review, 73 (2), pp. 204-226.
There are 46 citations in total.

Details

Primary Language English
Subjects Economics
Journal Section Research Articles
Authors

Cem Başlevent This is me

Publication Date January 1, 2014
Published in Issue Year 2014 Volume: 3 Issue: 1

Cite

APA Başlevent, C. (2014). The Work-Life Conflict and Well-Being of Turkish Employees. Ekonomi-Tek, 3(1), 57-76.