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Happiness at Work Andrew Oswald University of Warwick, UK

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Happiness at Work Andrew Oswald University of Warwick, UK With many thanks to Professor Andrew E. Clark (Paris) for data and helpful advice . Job satisfaction and work happiness have been studied in two ways. Method 1. By asking people what they want in a job. Method 2. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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Happiness at Work Andrew Oswald University of Warwick, UK With many thanks to Professor Andrew E. Clark (Paris) for data and helpful advice .
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Page 1: Happiness at Work Andrew Oswald University of Warwick, UK

Happiness at WorkAndrew Oswald

University of Warwick, UK

With many thanks to Professor Andrew E. Clark (Paris) for data and helpful advice.

Page 3: Happiness at Work Andrew Oswald University of Warwick, UK

Method 1

By asking people what they want in a job.

Page 5: Happiness at Work Andrew Oswald University of Warwick, UK

What do employees say they want in a job?

Page 6: Happiness at Work Andrew Oswald University of Warwick, UK

People’s top two priorities:

Page 7: Happiness at Work Andrew Oswald University of Warwick, UK

People’s top two priorities:

• “Job security”

Page 8: Happiness at Work Andrew Oswald University of Warwick, UK

People’s top two priorities:

• “Job security”• “Work that is interesting”

Page 9: Happiness at Work Andrew Oswald University of Warwick, UK

The next four priorities:

Page 10: Happiness at Work Andrew Oswald University of Warwick, UK

The next four priorities:

• “A job that allows me to work independently”

Page 11: Happiness at Work Andrew Oswald University of Warwick, UK

The next four priorities:

• “A job that allows me to work independently”

• “Opportunities for advancement”

Page 12: Happiness at Work Andrew Oswald University of Warwick, UK

The next four priorities:

• “A job that allows me to work independently”

• “Opportunities for advancement”

• “A job useful for society”

Page 13: Happiness at Work Andrew Oswald University of Warwick, UK

The next four priorities:

• “A job that allows me to work independently”

• “Opportunities for advancement”

• “A job useful for society”• “High income”

Page 14: Happiness at Work Andrew Oswald University of Warwick, UK

We have data on all this, from the International Social Survey Programme, for 15 countries.

Page 15: Happiness at Work Andrew Oswald University of Warwick, UK

Job Values: Women

10

20

30

40

50

60

Perc

enta

ge

19972005

Page 16: Happiness at Work Andrew Oswald University of Warwick, UK

Job Values: Men

10

20

30

40

50

60

Perc

enta

ge

19972005

Page 17: Happiness at Work Andrew Oswald University of Warwick, UK

• Now to the literature on the determinants of job satisfaction.

Page 19: Happiness at Work Andrew Oswald University of Warwick, UK

A typical question

• “All things considered, how satisfied are you with your job?”

• Answers from 1, 2, ... 7• 7 = “Completely satisfied”• 1 = “Completely dissatisfied”

Page 20: Happiness at Work Andrew Oswald University of Warwick, UK

Some cheery news:

Page 21: Happiness at Work Andrew Oswald University of Warwick, UK

• European levels of job satisfaction are high.

~ 5.4 out of seven

Page 22: Happiness at Work Andrew Oswald University of Warwick, UK

• In our work, we have new data on random samples from 35 countries.

Page 23: Happiness at Work Andrew Oswald University of Warwick, UK

Findings on job satisfaction

Page 24: Happiness at Work Andrew Oswald University of Warwick, UK

Findings on job satisfaction

PayLarge workplace

FemaleJob securityEducationAutonomy

Page 25: Happiness at Work Andrew Oswald University of Warwick, UK

Findings on job satisfaction

Pay positiveLarge workplace

FemaleJob securityEducationAutonomy

Page 26: Happiness at Work Andrew Oswald University of Warwick, UK

Findings on job satisfaction

Pay positiveLarge workplace negative

FemaleJob securityEducationAutonomy

Page 27: Happiness at Work Andrew Oswald University of Warwick, UK

Findings on job satisfaction

Pay positiveLarge workplace negative

Female positiveJob securityEducationAutonomy

Page 28: Happiness at Work Andrew Oswald University of Warwick, UK

Findings on job satisfaction

Pay positiveLarge workplace negative

Female positiveJob security positiveEducationAutonomy

Page 29: Happiness at Work Andrew Oswald University of Warwick, UK

Findings on job satisfaction

Pay positiveLarge workplace negative

Female positiveJob security positiveEducation zeroAutonomy

Page 30: Happiness at Work Andrew Oswald University of Warwick, UK

Findings on job satisfaction

Pay positiveLarge workplace negative

Female positiveJob security positiveEducation zeroAutonomy positive

Page 31: Happiness at Work Andrew Oswald University of Warwick, UK

On pay

Page 32: Happiness at Work Andrew Oswald University of Warwick, UK

On pay

• There is a lot of research that shows it is relative pay (particularly the ordinal rank of pay) that matters.

Page 33: Happiness at Work Andrew Oswald University of Warwick, UK

On autonomy

Page 34: Happiness at Work Andrew Oswald University of Warwick, UK

On autonomy

• Who controls the pace of work is important. It is OK if customers and colleagues do. Not when bosses or machines do.

Page 35: Happiness at Work Andrew Oswald University of Warwick, UK

On autonomy

• Who controls the pace of work is important. It is OK if customers and colleagues do. Not when bosses or machines do.

• Some evidence that it pays to give employees small freedoms (like the ability to move their desk slightly).

Page 36: Happiness at Work Andrew Oswald University of Warwick, UK

There is also an intriguing

life-cycle pattern

Page 37: Happiness at Work Andrew Oswald University of Warwick, UK

• Watch out for mid-life, and don’t be too hard on yourself.

Page 38: Happiness at Work Andrew Oswald University of Warwick, UK

The U in job satisfaction through life

5.3

5.4

5.5

5.6

5.7

5.8

20 30 40 50 60 70age at date of interview

95% CI Fitted values

Page 39: Happiness at Work Andrew Oswald University of Warwick, UK

This mirrors a general mid-life psychological low period (or ‘crisis’) that is normal in humans.

Page 40: Happiness at Work Andrew Oswald University of Warwick, UK

The pattern of a typical person’s happiness through life

4.9

5.0

5.1

5.2

5.3

5.4

5.5

5.6

15-20 21-30 31-40 41-50 51-60 61-70Age group

Aver

age

life

satis

fact

ion

scor

e

Page 41: Happiness at Work Andrew Oswald University of Warwick, UK

The probability of depression by ageMales, LFS data set 2004-2006

-0.01

-0.005

0

0.005

0.01

0.015

0.02

1938 1942 1946 1950 1954 1958 1962 1966 1970 1974 1978 1982 1986 1990

Year of birth

Reg

ress

ion

coef

ficie

nt

Page 42: Happiness at Work Andrew Oswald University of Warwick, UK
Page 43: Happiness at Work Andrew Oswald University of Warwick, UK

Great apes also have a midlife low

• We recently published this finding in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the USA (joint with A Weiss et al.)

Page 44: Happiness at Work Andrew Oswald University of Warwick, UK

Now, promotion:

Page 45: Happiness at Work Andrew Oswald University of Warwick, UK

Do you, and should you, want to be promoted?

Page 46: Happiness at Work Andrew Oswald University of Warwick, UK

“Leadership is associated with lower levels of stress”, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the USA, 2012.

• Gary D. Sherman et al.

Page 47: Happiness at Work Andrew Oswald University of Warwick, UK

• “Using unique samples of real leaders, including military officers and government officials ... leaders had lower levels of the stress hormone cortisol and lower anxiety.”

Page 48: Happiness at Work Andrew Oswald University of Warwick, UK

Yet new longitudinal research sheds doubt on the causality.

Page 49: Happiness at Work Andrew Oswald University of Warwick, UK

• Extra Status and Extra Stress: Are Promotions Good for Us?by David W. Johnston, Wang-Sheng Lee(June 2012) published in: Industrial and Labor Relations Review, 2013, 66 (1), 32-54

Page 50: Happiness at Work Andrew Oswald University of Warwick, UK

• Yes, promotion improves job security, pay perceptions and job satisfaction in the short term...

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• “However, promotions have negligible effects on workers' health and happiness... mental health seems affected with .. a deterioration two years after promotion.”

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Is work getting more stressful? [Yes]

Work by Francis Green, Keith Whitfield, et al.

Page 53: Happiness at Work Andrew Oswald University of Warwick, UK

0

510

15

2025

30

1992 1997 2001 2006

%

Males Females

Proportion of High-Strain Jobs

Green (2008) Work Effort and Worker Well-Being in the Age of Affluence

Source: Skills Survey series

Page 54: Happiness at Work Andrew Oswald University of Warwick, UK

But should organizations want their workers to have high job satisfaction?

Page 55: Happiness at Work Andrew Oswald University of Warwick, UK

Very probably, yes.

Happiness makes people more productive.

Page 56: Happiness at Work Andrew Oswald University of Warwick, UK

Positive effects for organizations from job satisfaction

• Edmans, A. 2012. The link between job satisfaction and firm value, with implications for corporate social responsibility. Academy of Management Perspectives 26, 1-19.

• Bockerman, P; Ilmakannus, P. 2012. The Job Satisfaction-Productivity Nexus: A Study Using Matched Survey and Register Data. Industrial and Labor Relations Review, 26, 1-19.

Page 57: Happiness at Work Andrew Oswald University of Warwick, UK

The Edmans study• “To address reverse causality, I measure

firm value by using future stock returns .......Companies listed in the "100 Best

Companies to Work For in America" generated 2.3% to 3.8% higher stock returns per year than their peers from 1984 through 2011.”

Page 58: Happiness at Work Andrew Oswald University of Warwick, UK

• The Bockerman paper studies data on 1000 establishments in Finland.

• It finds a strong correlation between job satisfaction and value-added-per-worker 2 years later.

Page 59: Happiness at Work Andrew Oswald University of Warwick, UK

A Warwick University study

• We studied 500 people in the laboratory doing a ‘white collar task’ under timed pressure.

Page 60: Happiness at Work Andrew Oswald University of Warwick, UK

• Those with recent family bad life events were less happy and less productive.

• A random sample were made to laugh for 10 minutes first – they were then 12% more productive.

Page 61: Happiness at Work Andrew Oswald University of Warwick, UK

Just before I close:

Page 62: Happiness at Work Andrew Oswald University of Warwick, UK

Job satisfaction and mental well-being at work are of interest in themselves.

Page 64: Happiness at Work Andrew Oswald University of Warwick, UK

The work of Sheldon Cohen

Page 65: Happiness at Work Andrew Oswald University of Warwick, UK

The work of Sheldon Cohen

The Cohen laboratory trials show less-stressed people have a stronger immune system.

Page 66: Happiness at Work Andrew Oswald University of Warwick, UK

Author(s): Ebrecht M, Hextall J, Kirtley LG, Taylor A, Dyson M, Weinman J PSYCHONEUROENDOCRINOLOGY    Volume: 29    Issue: 6    Pages: 798-809    Published: JUL 2004 

Page 67: Happiness at Work Andrew Oswald University of Warwick, UK

In other words, happier human beings heal more quickly.

Page 68: Happiness at Work Andrew Oswald University of Warwick, UK

We need to understand these interconnections better.

Page 69: Happiness at Work Andrew Oswald University of Warwick, UK

Some ideas to end:

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Conclusions

#1 There are clear patterns in job satisfaction found across the industrialized nations.

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Conclusions

#2 High job satisfaction seems genuinely valuable for organizations.

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Conclusions

#3 It is probably also valuable for people’s physical health.

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Conclusions

#4 Bosses do have lower cortisol and higher job satisfaction, but it is not clear that promotion does that to them.

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Conclusions

#5 There is some evidence that mental strain at work is a growing problem in Europe.

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Conclusions

#6 Giving people small freedoms probably pays off commercially.

Page 76: Happiness at Work Andrew Oswald University of Warwick, UK

I know you believe in fun at work

Page 77: Happiness at Work Andrew Oswald University of Warwick, UK

Happiness at Work

Andrew OswaldUniversity of Warwick, UK

With many thanks to Professor Andrew E. Clark (Paris) for data and helpful advice.


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