Escape from Working Poverty: Steps toward Sustainable Livelihood

被引:15
|
作者
Haar, Jarrod [1 ]
Carr, Stuart C. [2 ]
Arrowsmith, James [3 ]
Parker, Jane [3 ]
Hodgetts, Darrin [2 ]
Alefaio-Tugia, Siautu [2 ]
机构
[1] Auckland Univ Technol, New Zealand Work Res Inst, Dept Management, Auckland 1142, New Zealand
[2] Massey Univ, Sch Psychol, Project GLOW Global Living Organisat Wage, EPIC, Auckland 1142, New Zealand
[3] Massey Univ, Sch Management, MPOWER, Auckland 1142, New Zealand
关键词
working poverty; SDGs; pay fairness; work-life balance; job satisfaction; moderated mediation; ORGANIZATIONAL JUSTICE; LIFE BALANCE; JOB-SATISFACTION; BAD JOBS; IDENTITY; METAANALYSIS; MANAGEMENT; ATTITUDES;
D O I
10.3390/su10114144
中图分类号
X [环境科学、安全科学];
学科分类号
08 ; 0830 ;
摘要
Working poverty affects over half the world's working population, yet we know remarkably little about the role of wages in transitioning toward sustainable livelihood. We develop and test a model whereby as pay approaches a living wage range, pay fairness becomes clearly associated with work-life balance; this in turn links to job satisfaction, which is a four-step process at the psychological level. We further extend this by testing a moderated mediated model, whereby income level is tested as a boundary condition. Using data from N = 873 New Zealand employees, we focus on relatively low-waged employees across three levels of income: up to $20,000, $20-40,000, and $40-60,000, with the last band straddling the New Zealand Living Wage. We find strong support for pay fairness predicting work-life balance and job satisfaction, with work-life balance mediating the relationship toward job satisfaction. In addition, we find direct effects from income to work-life balance, although not job satisfaction. Furthermore, two-way moderation is supported toward work-life balance and job satisfaction, with higher income employees reporting higher outcomes when fairness is high. The index of moderated mediation is also significantly supporting, indicating that work-life balance has a stronger mediation effect as income rises. Thus, as workers emerged from working poverty, pay fairness, and in turn work-life balance, became psychologically more salient for happiness at work, implying that a pathway to Sustainable Development Goal 8 includes at least three psychological steps, in addition to the pecuniary issue of pay: fairness, work-life balance, and job satisfaction.
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页数:14
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