Disclosing ‘masked employees’ in Europe: job control, job demands and job outcomes of ‘dependent self-employed workers’

Loading...
Thumbnail Image

Publication date

Advisors

Department

Research group

Center

Metrics

Google Scholar

Export

Research Projects

Organizational Units

Journal Issue

Abstract

In this study, we examine whether job control, job demands and job outcomes of ‘dependent selfemployed workers’, i.e. the workers in this particular grey zone between employment and self-employment, are more similar to those of the self-employed or paid employed. To this end, we use microdata drawn from the 2010 wave of the European Working Conditions Survey for 34 European countries. First, we develop and validate a psychometrically sound multidimensional scale for these 3 key constructs by conducting both exploratory and confirmatory factor analysis. Then, multilevel (hierarchical) linear regressions are used to test the validity of our hypotheses. Our results suggest that these hybrid work relationships are endowed with the least favourable attributes of both groups: lower job control than self-employed workers, higher job demands than paid employees and, overall, worse job outcomes than both.

Unesco Subjects

Bibliographic citation

Millán Tapia, A., Millán Tapia, J. M. & Caçador-Rodrigues, L. (2019). Disclosing ‘masked employees’ in Europe: job control, job demands and job outcomes of ‘dependent self-employed workers.’ Small Business Economics, 55(2), 461–474. DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s11187-019-00245-7

Collections

Atribución-NoComercial-SinDerivadas 3.0 España
The license for this item is described as Atribución-NoComercial-SinDerivadas 3.0 España