Cross–lagged associations between perceived external employability, job insecurity, and exhaustion: testing gain and loss spirals according to the conservation of resources theory
Date
2012Author
De Cuyper, Nele
De Witte, Hans
Mäkikangas, Anne
Kinnunen, Ulla
Mauno, Saija
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
This study investigates perceived external employability (PEE) as a personal resource in relation to job
insecurity and exhaustion. We advance the idea that PEE may reduce feelings of job insecurity and, through
felt job insecurity, also exhaustion. That is, we probe the paths from PEE to job insecurity and from job
insecurity to exhaustion. We furthermore account for possible reversed causality, so that exhaustion!felt
job insecurity and felt job insecurity!PEE. This aligns with insights from the Conservation of Resources
Theory, which is built on the assumption of resource caravans passageways and associated gain and loss
spirals. We based the results on a sample of 1314 workers from two Finnish universities. Respondents
participated twice in the study with a time lag of one year. We found that PEE related negatively to felt
job insecurity and vice versa. Similarly, there was a reciprocal positive relationship between felt job insecurity
and exhaustion. We conclude that PEE may prevent feelings of insecurity and, through reduced job insecurity,
also exhaustion
URI
http://hdl.handle.net/10394/17947http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/job.1800/abstract
DOI: 10.1002/job.1800
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- Faculty of Humanities [2042]