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Measuring poor job quality amongst employees: the VicWAL job quality index

journal contribution
posted on 2024-11-01, 17:16 authored by Sara CharlesworthSara Charlesworth, Jennifer Welsh, Lyndall Strazdins, Marian Baird, Iain Campbell
Job quality is a central, though contested, concern of contemporary employment relations. Our focus in this article is on poor job quality, which can have a major impact on employee well-being and work-life outcomes. We report on the construction of a job quality index (JQI) using items from the 2009 Victorian Work and Life (VicWAL) survey, which had 3007 employee respondents. The VicWAL JQI is composed of 15 items, subsumed in six components that are recognised in the literature as contributing to job quality: working-time autonomy, job security, job control, workload, skill development and access to work-life provisions. Our measure counts aggregate job quality deficits across the six components. The VicWAL JQI performs as expected in regard to several key screening variables, including contract status and occupation, and has a significant linear relationship with a measure of work-life interference. We find almost one-fifth of respondents are located in very poor-quality jobs (two or more reported deficits in components), with considerable diversity in these jobs and in the deficits reported. High workloads were reported in almost half the sample. The article explores the intriguing impact of workload on the VicWAL JQI and highlights the implications of the measure for the assessment of job quality in Australia.

History

Journal

Labour & Industry

Volume

24

Issue

2

Start page

103

End page

123

Total pages

21

Publisher

Taylor & Francis Australasia

Place published

Australia

Language

English

Copyright

© 2014 AIRAANZ

Former Identifier

2006049086

Esploro creation date

2020-06-22

Fedora creation date

2015-01-16

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