What Matters in a Job? A Multi-Level Study of Job Preference Orientations and the Intrinsic Quality of Work in 25 Societies

This paper examines cross-national differences in job preference orientations from the perspective of job quality. In particular, it investigates the extent to which preferences of workers in 25 developed societies are shaped by the intrinsic quality of jobs and its institutional determinants, as hi...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Michal Kozák
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2020-08-01
Series:Societies
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2075-4698/10/3/62
id doaj-e6efbe0ee75b4d3381b6760e0c7c0588
record_format Article
spelling doaj-e6efbe0ee75b4d3381b6760e0c7c05882020-11-25T03:41:52ZengMDPI AGSocieties2075-46982020-08-0110626210.3390/soc10030062What Matters in a Job? A Multi-Level Study of Job Preference Orientations and the Intrinsic Quality of Work in 25 SocietiesMichal Kozák0Department of Sociology, University of Bergen, Rosenbergsgaten 39, 5015 Bergen, NorwayThis paper examines cross-national differences in job preference orientations from the perspective of job quality. In particular, it investigates the extent to which preferences of workers in 25 developed societies are shaped by the intrinsic quality of jobs and its institutional determinants, as highlighted by varieties of capitalism (VoC) and power resources theory (PRT). The study uses multi-level models with country-specific random intercepts fitted to individual data from the International Social Survey Programme’s 2015 Work Orientations module, paired with institutional indicators from various sources. The results show that workers within countries tend to be oriented towards the same types of rewards that their jobs offer, with the intrinsic quality of work standing out as the most important factor of all. This logic extends to the cross-national variation in job preference orientations, which is strongly related to the average intrinsic quality of jobs in national labor markets and its institutional factors emphasized by PRT, rather than VoC.https://www.mdpi.com/2075-4698/10/3/62job preference orientationsjob preferenceswork orientationswork valuesquality of workjob quality
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Michal Kozák
spellingShingle Michal Kozák
What Matters in a Job? A Multi-Level Study of Job Preference Orientations and the Intrinsic Quality of Work in 25 Societies
Societies
job preference orientations
job preferences
work orientations
work values
quality of work
job quality
author_facet Michal Kozák
author_sort Michal Kozák
title What Matters in a Job? A Multi-Level Study of Job Preference Orientations and the Intrinsic Quality of Work in 25 Societies
title_short What Matters in a Job? A Multi-Level Study of Job Preference Orientations and the Intrinsic Quality of Work in 25 Societies
title_full What Matters in a Job? A Multi-Level Study of Job Preference Orientations and the Intrinsic Quality of Work in 25 Societies
title_fullStr What Matters in a Job? A Multi-Level Study of Job Preference Orientations and the Intrinsic Quality of Work in 25 Societies
title_full_unstemmed What Matters in a Job? A Multi-Level Study of Job Preference Orientations and the Intrinsic Quality of Work in 25 Societies
title_sort what matters in a job? a multi-level study of job preference orientations and the intrinsic quality of work in 25 societies
publisher MDPI AG
series Societies
issn 2075-4698
publishDate 2020-08-01
description This paper examines cross-national differences in job preference orientations from the perspective of job quality. In particular, it investigates the extent to which preferences of workers in 25 developed societies are shaped by the intrinsic quality of jobs and its institutional determinants, as highlighted by varieties of capitalism (VoC) and power resources theory (PRT). The study uses multi-level models with country-specific random intercepts fitted to individual data from the International Social Survey Programme’s 2015 Work Orientations module, paired with institutional indicators from various sources. The results show that workers within countries tend to be oriented towards the same types of rewards that their jobs offer, with the intrinsic quality of work standing out as the most important factor of all. This logic extends to the cross-national variation in job preference orientations, which is strongly related to the average intrinsic quality of jobs in national labor markets and its institutional factors emphasized by PRT, rather than VoC.
topic job preference orientations
job preferences
work orientations
work values
quality of work
job quality
url https://www.mdpi.com/2075-4698/10/3/62
work_keys_str_mv AT michalkozak whatmattersinajobamultilevelstudyofjobpreferenceorientationsandtheintrinsicqualityofworkin25societies
_version_ 1724527812438654976