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Erschienen in: Social Indicators Research 1/2015

01.03.2015

Do Part-Time Jobs Mitigate Workers’ Work–Family Conflict and Enhance Wellbeing? New Evidence from Four East-Asian Societies

verfasst von: Akiko Sato Oishi, Raymond K. H. Chan, Lillian Lih-Rong Wang, Ju-Hyun Kim

Erschienen in: Social Indicators Research | Ausgabe 1/2015

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Abstract

Studies in Western countries have shown that part-time work is associated with lower work–family conflict and higher job satisfaction, especially in the case of women. The present study addressed three questions: (1) are part-time workers more likely to report a lower level of work–family conflict and higher levels of job satisfaction and life satisfaction than those who work full-time? (2) Does having children or living with an older person who needs to be cared for affect individuals’ work–family conflict, job satisfaction and life satisfaction? (3) Are gender-role beliefs associated with work–family conflict, job satisfaction and life satisfaction? To answer these questions, joint ordered probit models were estimated using a merged dataset on workers in four East-Asian societies: Hong Kong, Japan, Korea, and Taiwan. The outcome measures used in the analyses were: work–family conflict, family–work conflict, job satisfaction, and life satisfaction. Controlling for personal and family attributes, part-time work was negatively associated with work–family conflict and job satisfaction, but not with life satisfaction. Although having children was not related to outcome measures, living with a frail elderly person significantly increased work–family and family–work conflicts. Married women who accepted gender-role beliefs were less likely to have work–family conflict.

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Fußnoten
1
In Taiwan, for example, monetary transfer from children comprises 42 % of income of the Taiwanese elderly aged ≥65 years (Taiwan Ministry of Interior, The Survey of Elderly Status, June 2009).
 
2
To examine the validity of our definition of “large cities”, we narrowed further our sample to residents of Kanto (larger Tokyo Metropolitan area) and Kansai (larger Osaka area) for Japan (N = 258) and residents of Seoul and Busan for Korea (N = 153). Then, we estimated the same models as in the subsequent section. Although significance levels declined owing to small sample sizes, the overall implication of the results did not change.
 
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Metadaten
Titel
Do Part-Time Jobs Mitigate Workers’ Work–Family Conflict and Enhance Wellbeing? New Evidence from Four East-Asian Societies
verfasst von
Akiko Sato Oishi
Raymond K. H. Chan
Lillian Lih-Rong Wang
Ju-Hyun Kim
Publikationsdatum
01.03.2015
Verlag
Springer Netherlands
Erschienen in
Social Indicators Research / Ausgabe 1/2015
Print ISSN: 0303-8300
Elektronische ISSN: 1573-0921
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s11205-014-0624-8

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