Determinants of Work Motivation and Work Ability among Older Workers and Implications for the Desire for Continued Employment

In times of demographic change, with the associated challenges for social security systems and the looming lack of skilled workers, extending working life becomes increasingly significant. According to the continuity theory (Atchley 1989) we can assume that individuals who are satisfied with their s...

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Main Authors: Victoria Büsch, Dennis Dittrich, Uta Lieberum
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Federal Institute for Population Research 2012-03-01
Series:Comparative Population Studies
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.comparativepopulationstudies.de/index.php/CPoS/article/view/69
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spelling doaj-a220e5ba1ce34df99ab2f2004ed844bc2021-08-02T10:15:18ZengFederal Institute for Population ResearchComparative Population Studies1869-89801869-89992012-03-0135434Determinants of Work Motivation and Work Ability among Older Workers and Implications for the Desire for Continued EmploymentVictoria BüschDennis DittrichUta LieberumIn times of demographic change, with the associated challenges for social security systems and the looming lack of skilled workers, extending working life becomes increasingly significant. According to the continuity theory (Atchley 1989) we can assume that individuals who are satisfied with their structures and performance will stay at work longer. We will therefore examine whether motivation and perceived work ability have an influence on the desire for continued employment. In addition, we will answer the question of whether factors that have a positive influence on motivation and work ability also have a direct influence on continued employment. Besides objective factors such as enterprise size and occupational status, we will examine subjective factors, such as assessment of recognition, the demands, and the meaningfulness of the work for their contributions to the explanation. The following analysis is based on a survey taken in May 2008 together with the Bundesinstitut für Bevölkerungsforschung (BiB). It enables us to identify the desire for continued employment in old age, the existing work motivation, and the state of health. The core results of the statistical analysis show that in men high motivation is linked to the desire for continued employment in retirement age. This does not apply to women; for them, work ability is the decisive criterion. In general, we observe that a positive assessment of the subjective influencing factors strengthen work motivation. In addition, with regard to objective factors it was ascertained that for men the working hour regime (full-time work) and occupation status (salaried “white-collar” employees) correlate positively with the desire for continued employment. In particular, meaningful work increases motivation among men and work ability increases motivation among women. It appears important that enterprises convince their employees of the meaningfulness of the work.http://www.comparativepopulationstudies.de/index.php/CPoS/article/view/69Extended working lifeOlder workersEmployee motivationHealth
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Victoria Büsch
Dennis Dittrich
Uta Lieberum
spellingShingle Victoria Büsch
Dennis Dittrich
Uta Lieberum
Determinants of Work Motivation and Work Ability among Older Workers and Implications for the Desire for Continued Employment
Comparative Population Studies
Extended working life
Older workers
Employee motivation
Health
author_facet Victoria Büsch
Dennis Dittrich
Uta Lieberum
author_sort Victoria Büsch
title Determinants of Work Motivation and Work Ability among Older Workers and Implications for the Desire for Continued Employment
title_short Determinants of Work Motivation and Work Ability among Older Workers and Implications for the Desire for Continued Employment
title_full Determinants of Work Motivation and Work Ability among Older Workers and Implications for the Desire for Continued Employment
title_fullStr Determinants of Work Motivation and Work Ability among Older Workers and Implications for the Desire for Continued Employment
title_full_unstemmed Determinants of Work Motivation and Work Ability among Older Workers and Implications for the Desire for Continued Employment
title_sort determinants of work motivation and work ability among older workers and implications for the desire for continued employment
publisher Federal Institute for Population Research
series Comparative Population Studies
issn 1869-8980
1869-8999
publishDate 2012-03-01
description In times of demographic change, with the associated challenges for social security systems and the looming lack of skilled workers, extending working life becomes increasingly significant. According to the continuity theory (Atchley 1989) we can assume that individuals who are satisfied with their structures and performance will stay at work longer. We will therefore examine whether motivation and perceived work ability have an influence on the desire for continued employment. In addition, we will answer the question of whether factors that have a positive influence on motivation and work ability also have a direct influence on continued employment. Besides objective factors such as enterprise size and occupational status, we will examine subjective factors, such as assessment of recognition, the demands, and the meaningfulness of the work for their contributions to the explanation. The following analysis is based on a survey taken in May 2008 together with the Bundesinstitut für Bevölkerungsforschung (BiB). It enables us to identify the desire for continued employment in old age, the existing work motivation, and the state of health. The core results of the statistical analysis show that in men high motivation is linked to the desire for continued employment in retirement age. This does not apply to women; for them, work ability is the decisive criterion. In general, we observe that a positive assessment of the subjective influencing factors strengthen work motivation. In addition, with regard to objective factors it was ascertained that for men the working hour regime (full-time work) and occupation status (salaried “white-collar” employees) correlate positively with the desire for continued employment. In particular, meaningful work increases motivation among men and work ability increases motivation among women. It appears important that enterprises convince their employees of the meaningfulness of the work.
topic Extended working life
Older workers
Employee motivation
Health
url http://www.comparativepopulationstudies.de/index.php/CPoS/article/view/69
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