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The effects of employees' empowerment on job satisfaction: empirical analysis of the demand-control model.

Akinfemisoye, Tolulope; Perotin, Virginie

Authors

Virginie Perotin



Abstract

The demand-control model is explored to investigate the effects of employees' empowerment on different forms of job satisfaction in British workplaces while controlling for the presence of job demands. The model proposes that imbalances between the demands placed on employees and the control they have in their job negatively affect employee wellbeing and health. Re-evaluating individual forms of employee involvement practices in the context of the demand-control model, we examine the individual effects of job demands and job control on nine forms of job satisfaction, as well as the effects of the types of jobs identified by the model based on the degree of imbalance between demands and control. In addition, we test whether these effects are moderated or amplified by the presence of equality policies in the firm, which may affect employees' sense of control. Data from the 2011 Workplace Employment Relations Survey (WERS) are estimated using weighted logit models. The results suggest that employees are more likely to be satisfied in low strain jobs (jobs with low demands and high control) than in high strain jobs (jobs with high demands and low control). Employees in passive jobs (jobs with low demand and low control) on the other hand are less likely to be satisfied with achievement and influence than employees in low strain jobs. Importantly, we find that equality plans moderate the negative effects of job demands and strengthen the effects of job control. This study's originality is that it is a first-of-its-kind empirical analysis of the demand-control model. The model was also extended by including equal opportunity policy.

Citation

AKINFEMISOYE, T. and PEROTIN, V. 2017. The effects of employees' empowerment on job satisfaction: empirical analysis of the demand-control model. Presented at the Leeds festival of economics, democracy and the workplace, 4-5 May 2017, Leeds, UK.

Presentation Conference Type Presentation / Talk
Conference Name Leeds festival of economics, democracy and the workplace
Start Date May 4, 2017
End Date May 5, 2017
Deposit Date Sep 24, 2022
Publicly Available Date Sep 26, 2023
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Keywords Job satisfaction, Employees; Employee empowerment; Employee engagement
Public URL https://rgu-repository.worktribe.com/output/1763795