Determinants of job satisfaction for salaried and self-employed professionals in Finland

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Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
School of Business | A1 Alkuperäisartikkeli tieteellisessä aikakauslehdessä
Date
2013
Major/Subject
Mcode
Degree programme
Language
en
Pages
2034-2053
Series
The International Journal of Human Resource Management, Volume 24, Issue 10
Abstract
This paper contributes to our knowledge of the determinants of job satisfaction by analysing the effects of employment status (self-employed or salaried employee) and work characteristics (autonomy, variety, task identity, task significance and feedback) on job satisfaction in a sample of 2327 Finnish professionals. The results of the structural equation model analysis show that although the self-employed are significantly more satisfied with their jobs than their salaried counterparts also in Finland, employment status as such does not explain job satisfaction when the five work characteristics are added to the structural model. Further, the analysis finds that task significance, variety and autonomy have similar effects on the level of job satisfaction among both employees and self-employed individuals, while feedback has a weaker effect when the individual is self- employed and task identity does not affect job satisfaction in either group. Overall the study points to the need to develop jobs that are high in autonomy, variety and task significance for professionals in order to enhance job satisfaction.
Description
Keywords
job satisfaction, work characteristics, employment status, self-employed, salary-earners, professionals, Finland
Other note
Citation
Hytti, Ulla & Kautonen, Teemu & Akola, Elisa. 2013. Determinants of job satisfaction for salaried and self-employed professionals in Finland. The International Journal of Human Resource Management. Volume 24, Issue 10. 2034-2053. DOI: 10.1080/09585192.2012.723023.