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The effects of prolonged job insecurity on the psychological well-being of workers.


Job insecurity Insecurity
Inseparability (See FRIENDSHIP.)

Insolence (See ARROGANCE.)

Hamlet

introspective, vacillating Prince of Denmark. [Br. Lit.: Hamlet]

Linus

cartoon character who is lost without his security blanket.
 has been increasing since the 1980s. While researchers have found job insecurity to be negatively associated with multiple indicators of well-being for workers and their families in cross sectional sec·tion·al  
adj.
1. Of, relating to, or characteristic of a particular district.

2. Composed of or divided into component sections.

n.
 studies, less is known about the long term effects of prolonged pro·long  
tr.v. pro·longed, pro·long·ing, pro·longs
1. To lengthen in duration; protract.

2. To lengthen in extent.
 job insecurity. Specifically, there is a need to collect measures of both insecurity and its consequences at multiple time periods. The current study followed workers for 3 1/2 years to assess the effects of chronic job insecurity on psychological distress psychological distress The end result of factors–eg, psychogenic pain, internal conflicts, and external stress that prevent a person from self-actualization and connecting with 'significant others'. See Humanistic psychology. . Results indicate that while workers reported increased feelings of security over time, there were longer term negative effects on workers' depression levels. The importance of government regulations to decrease insecurity is discussed.

Keywords: job insecurity, well-being, workers, psychological distress

**********

As employment continues to shift in the U.S., more and more workers face uncertainty in their jobs. Almost four million U.S. workers who were previously in long tenured ten·ured  
adj.
Having tenure: tenured civil servants; tenured faculty.

Adj. 1. tenured
 positions were displaced displaced

see displacement.
 from their jobs between 1997 and 2000 (Helwig, 2004). One important reason for this shift is increasing global competition. The search for cheap labor and greater profits has resulted in the restructuring restructuring - The transformation from one representation form to another at the same relative abstraction level, while preserving the subject system's external behaviour (functionality and semantics).  of the economy from manufacturing to service industries (Mishel, Bernstein & Allegretto al·le·gret·to   Music
adv. & adj.
In a moderately quick tempo, usually considered to be slightly slower than allegro but faster than andante. Used chiefly as a direction.

n. pl.
, 2005). The service and retail industries accounted for 83.3% of all new jobs between 1989 and 1995. At the same time, the manufacturing industry, once considered the most stable employer in the U.S. for non-college educated workers, declined in the 1990s, losing over 2 million jobs between 1980 and 1995 (Mishel, Bernstein & Schmitt, 1997). Blue collar workers were hit hard between 2000 and 2003 as well, losing another 2.7 million jobs in just a three year period (Mishel, Bernstein & Allegretto, 2005).

Job insecurity is not reserved for those workers whose employment is immediately threatened, however. Job insecurity is defined as a subjective perception of feelings of insecurity about the future of one's employment (Witt, 2005). Perceived job insecurity results when "workers come to doubt the continued existence of their jobs in the future" due to economic or organizational change (Reynolds, 2000, p.5). While job insecurity is especially relevant in the context of a corporation that is experiencing downsizing (1) Converting mainframe and mini-based systems to client/server LANs.

(2) To reduce equipment and associated costs by switching to a less-expensive system.

(jargon) downsizing
, perceived job insecurity is also experienced by workers in seemingly seem·ing  
adj.
Apparent; ostensible.

n.
Outward appearance; semblance.



seeming·ly adv.
 unthreatened job situations (Sverke & Hellgren, 2002). In a national survey in 1996, for example, 79% of respondents In the context of marketing research, a representative sample drawn from a larger population of people from whom information is collected and used to develop or confirm marketing strategy.  said that "every time" they heard about a company downsizing they worried about their own job, regardless of whether their own job was personally threatened (Andolsen, 1998). Therefore, the term "job insecurity" can be used to represent feelings associated with an actual threat to one's job, such as a lay off notice, or a more general perception by workers of job risk. Such findings are consistent with the central idea behind stress research, that the anticipation of a stressful event represents an important source of psychological distress equal to an actual event experienced (Lazarus & Folkman, 1984).

Conceptual Framework For the concept in aesthetics and art criticism, see .

A conceptual framework is used in research to outline possible courses of action or to present a preferred approach to a system analysis project.


While there is a growing body of research addressing short term job insecurity and its negative effects on workers and their families, there are many theoretical gaps in our understanding of the potential longer term consequences for workers who experience prolonged job insecurity. The current study is an attempt to address these gaps. Three important conceptual issues will be addressed in this paper. First, most studies that have examined the consequences of job insecurity have been cross-sectional, "relating job insecurity to its potential outcomes within a single data collection wave. This means that very little is known about the long term effects of job insecurity" (Sverke & Hellgren, 2002, p.33).

The few longitudinal studies longitudinal studies,
n.pl the epidemiologic studies that record data from a respresentative sample at repeated intervals over an extended span of time rather than at a single or limited number over a short period.
 that have examined prolonged job insecurity have largely looked at only two points in time. Such a design does not allow for the assessment of potential non-linear effects of job insecurity over time. This becomes particularly salient considering that some social scientists speculate there may be a cumulative effect of stress for job insecure in·se·cure
adj.
1. Lacking emotional stability; not well-adjusted.

2. Lacking self-confidence; plagued by anxiety.



in
 workers, resulting in greater negative psychological outcomes over time, while other research indicates that job insecurity dissipates quickly and the effects are not cumulative (Heaney, Israel & House, 1994; Armstrong-Stassen, 2002). Therefore, longitudinal lon·gi·tu·di·nal
adj.
Running in the direction of the long axis of the body or any of its parts.
 analyses where both "insecurity and its postulated pos·tu·late  
tr.v. pos·tu·lat·ed, pos·tu·lat·ing, pos·tu·lates
1. To make claim for; demand.

2. To assume or assert the truth, reality, or necessity of, especially as a basis of an argument.

3.
 consequences are measured on multiple occasions is needed to ... detect the strength and duration of the effects of job insecurity on its potential outcomes" (Sverke & Hellgren, 2002, p. 33).

Second, there are only a small number of studies on the long term effects of job insecurity that have been conducted in the United States United States, officially United States of America, republic (2005 est. pop. 295,734,000), 3,539,227 sq mi (9,166,598 sq km), North America. The United States is the world's third largest country in population and the fourth largest country in area. . Most of the longitudinal studies on the effects of job insecurity have been conducted in Canada, Australia and Europe. There may be important variations in outcomes of insecurity from country to country. The literature needs to be examined carefully, since workers in other countries may be more or less protected from the severity of potential job loss depending on whether they have employment policies that serve to protect them (Givord & Maurin, 2003; Andolsen, 1998). If this is the case it could account for some of the conflicting results reported in the longitudinal research on job insecurity thus far.

Third, while there has been much conceptual discussion in the literature on the demographic characteristics of workers who are most vulnerable to the potential negative effects of chronic job insecurity, there are few studies that have empirically examined these relationships (Bargal, Back, & Ariav, 1992; Andolsen, 1998). Therefore, demographic and financial characteristics of U.S. workers are included in this analysis to examine variations in vulnerability to job insecurity.

This paper presents the results of a longitudinal study longitudinal study

a chronological study in epidemiology which attempts to establish a relationship between an antecedent cause and a subsequent effect. See also cohort study.
 that followed a sample of U.S. manufacturing workers over 3 1/2 years with multiple data collection periods in an attempt to resolve some of the disagreements surrounding sur·round  
tr.v. sur·round·ed, sur·round·ing, sur·rounds
1. To extend on all sides of simultaneously; encircle.

2. To enclose or confine on all sides so as to bar escape or outside communication.

n.
 the strength and duration of the effects of prolonged job insecurity on the psychological well-being psychological well-being Research A nebulous legislative term intended to ensure that certain categories of lab animals, especially primates, don't 'go nuts' as a result of experimental design or conditions  of workers. The inconsistencies of results from previous longitudinal research on job insecurity are reviewed taking into account the country of origin. Finally, implications for policy that may mediate MEDIATE, POWERS. Those incident to primary powers, given by a principal to his agent. For example, the general authority given to collect, receive and pay debts due by or to the principal is a primary power.  the impact of job insecurity are discussed.

The Changing Nature of Job Security

For decades after World War II, workers in the U.S., particularly in the manufacturing sector, expected that good employees would be offered long term job security. But, as Andolsen (1998) points out, the terms of the social contract between employees and employers have changed, with employers no longer promising long term employment with the company in "highly competitive conditions in an increasingly deregulated global economy" (p. 25). This changing social contract between employers and employees has been coined by Andolsen as the new "employability contract", whereby employees are expected to enhance their skill levels to compete in the labor market labor market A place where labor is exchanged for wages; an LM is defined by geography, education and technical expertise, occupation, licensure or certification requirements, and job experience  with no guarantees of long term security from employers.

Beginning in the 1980s many corporations began downsizing, firing long time employees, and shifting from full-time workers to contingent workforces A contingent workforce is a provisional group of workers who work for an organization on a non-permanent basis, also known as freelancers, independent professionals, temporary contract workers, independent contractors or consultants. : part- time, temporary, and contract workers. Part of the intensity of the pain of job insecurity, according to according to
prep.
1. As stated or indicated by; on the authority of: according to historians.

2. In keeping with: according to instructions.

3.
 Wallulis (1998), comes from a sense of betrayal Betrayal
See also Treachery.

Judas Iscariot

apostle who betrays Jesus. [N.T.: Matthew 26:15]

Proteus

though engaged, steals his friend Valentine’s beloved, reveals his plot and effects his banishment. [Br.
 by employers. Being a good employee and having a sense of loyalty to the company was no longer enough to maintain security in their jobs. The new "employability" model is based on the highest short term profits for corporations, while workers must plan for a future in a highly uncertain and competitive economic environment.

Cross-Sectional Research on Job Insecurity

There was a sharp increase in job insecurity during the recessionary period of the 1980s (OECD OECD: see Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development. , 1997), and the effects of workers' perceived job insecurity were well documented during that time (Ashford, Lee & Bobko, 1989; Greenhalgh & Rosenblatt, 1984; Kuhnert, Sims & Lahey, 1989; Vance & Kuhnert, 1988). Cross-sectional research conducted during this period consistently found stress, anxiety, financial concerns and fear associated with job insecurity.

There were fewer studies that examined the negative effects of job insecurity on U.S. workers during the era of sustained economic recovery of the late 1990s and early 2000s, even though in 2000, 40.4% of laborers and 30.2% of blue-collar workers blue-collar worker nobrero/a

blue-collar worker nouvrier/ère col bleu

blue-collar worker n
 reported feeling insecure in their jobs (Reynolds, 2000).

In a cross-sectional study cross-sectional study
n.
See synchronic study.


cross-sectional study,
n the scientific method for the analysis of data gathered from two or more samples at one point in time.
 at a large university undergoing cutbacks and lay-offs in the U.S., Larson, Wilson and Beley (1994) found that job insecurity was negatively associated with marital Pertaining to the relationship of Husband and Wife; having to do with marriage.

Marital agreements are contracts that are entered into by individuals who are about to be married, are already married, or are in the process of ending a marriage.
 satisfaction and overall family functioning for both husbands and wives. In this study, job insecurity occurred as the result of a threat to the respondent's job situation. In a second cross-sectional study, Finnish researchers examined perceived job insecurity in a general sample of dual earner couples (Mauno & Kinnunen, 2002). Economic stress and low self-esteem self-esteem

Sense of personal worth and ability that is fundamental to an individual's identity. Family relationships during childhood are believed to play a crucial role in its development.
 were significantly related to job insecurity. Women were more insecure than men, and employees in the private sector were more insecure than workers in the public sector.

Finally, researchers in Australia sampled 1188 professionals in a cross-sectional general population survey to assess the association between job insecurity and depression, anxiety, a physical health summary scale and self-rated health (D'Souza, Strazdins, Lim, Broom broom, common name for plants of two closely related and similar Old World genera, Cytisus and Genista, of the family Leguminosae (pulse family). , & Rodgers, 2005). Job insecurity was found significantly associated with all four outcome measures, although the effects were most marked for depression and self-rated health.

The cross-sectional studies above largely demonstrate that workers' feelings of job insecurity correlate negatively with multiple indicators of well-being for both workers and their families, whether the perceived insecurity was the result of current restructuring, or if it were a more generalized gen·er·al·ized
adj.
1. Involving an entire organ, as when an epileptic seizure involves all parts of the brain.

2. Not specifically adapted to a particular environment or function; not specialized.

3.
 feeling of job insecurity. Since these studies describe cross-sectional research, it remains unknown whether insecurity or its consequences can be expected to subside sub·side  
intr.v. sub·sid·ed, sub·sid·ing, sub·sides
1. To sink to a lower or normal level.

2. To sink or settle down, as into a sofa.

3. To sink to the bottom, as a sediment.

4.
 after a short period of time. The experience of prolonged job insecurity may prove to be much more problematic for workers and their families in the long run.

Longitudinal Studies of Job Insecurity

Little definitive evidence exists regarding the effects of prolonged job insecurity on emotional well being. The studies that have examined this area have found mixed results. Heaney, Israel and House (1994) investigated the effects of extended periods of job insecurity in a sample of U.S. car manufacturers. Data were collected in two waves over a two year time period. The study provides evidence of the negative effects of chronic levels of job insecurity on job satisfaction and physical health. Heaney and colleagues found that extended periods of job insecurity, due to industry cutbacks and restructuring, contributed to increased physical symptomotology over and above the effect of job insecurity at any one point in time. The researchers concluded that job insecurity may be a cumulative stressor, increasing its effect over time. However, they recommended more longitudinal research that collected data at multiple points in time to better understand the process by which stress accumulates.

Researchers in Sweden conducted an analysis of a large retail chain undergoing major organizational restructuring (Hellgren, Sverke & Isaksson, 1999). They collected data at two points in time, the first in 1995 and the second a year later. Results were similar to those found in the previous study. By adding mental health status at time one to their multivariate The use of multiple variables in a forecasting model.  model, job insecurity plus their covariate covariate

predictors during the allocation of experimental units in a randomized design.
 increased the amount of variance The discrepancy between what a party to a lawsuit alleges will be proved in pleadings and what the party actually proves at trial.

In Zoning law, an official permit to use property in a manner that departs from the way in which other property in the same locality
 in mental health explained by the model from 30% to 39%. This supports Heaney, Israel and House's (1994) hypothesis of a cumulative effect of job insecurity on mental health. However, they too collected only two data points at two year intervals.

In an attempt to resolve the distinction between short term and more chronic insecurity, Ferrie, Shipley, Stansfeld and Marmot marmot, ground-living rodent of the genus Marmota, of the squirrel family, closely related to the ground squirrel, prairie dog, and chipmunk. Marmots are found in Eurasia and North America; the best-known North American marmot is the woodchuck, M.  (2002) examined data from the "Whitehall II study" a general population survey which targets all London based staff working in 20 civil service departments. They examined phase four (1995/6) and phase five (1997/99) of the study to assess changes between two groups of respondents: those who moved from secure to insecure employment from phase four to phase five; and those who they determined were chronically insecure during the same time period. Male respondents who moved from secure to insecure employment situations between the two data collection periods reported poorer self-rated health, scored lower on the general health questionnaire (GHQ), and reported higher levels of depression. Women reported lower self-rated health scores and higher blood pressure. Of those respondents who experienced chronic job insecurity, both men and women reported poorer self-rated health, lower GHQ, and higher depression levels.

Between 1990 and 1991, researchers in Australia collected questionnaires twice within a two month period to assess prolonged job insecurity in a sample of state public transportation employees whose department was undergoing restructuring (Dekker & Schaufeli, 1995). There were no significant differences in time one and time two levels of psychological distress, indicating that prolonged job insecurity was associated with continuously high levels of psychological distress, but these effects were not cumulative.

In contrast, results from a Canadian Canadian (kənā`dēən), river, 906 mi (1,458 km) long, rising in NE New Mexico. and flowing E across N Texas and central Oklahoma into the Arkansas River in E Oklahoma.  study by Armstrong-Stassen (2002) suggest that downsizing in a large government program did not have long term effects on the survivors' job security. Rather, as soon as employees knew they had survived the period of downsizing, feelings of job security were higher than at any point during the downsizing period. This study was the only study that looked at multiple points in time, collecting four waves of data from 1996-1999. Using repeated paired sample T-tests, Armstrong-Stassen reported that after the initial downsizing, feelings of security increased at each data collection period. Given that this study uses repeated measures, it is important to note that it is also the only study that found that insecurity significantly decreased quickly after the initial job threat dissipated dis·si·pat·ed  
adj.
1. Intemperate in the pursuit of pleasure; dissolute.

2. Wasted or squandered.

3. Irreversibly lost. Used of energy.
. However, Armstrong-Stassen did not include a measure of psychological or physical well-being, but focused instead on feelings of morale and organizational trust. Results indicate that while workers felt more secure over time, feelings of morale and trust remained low throughout. This may indicate that although job security increased over time, there were longer term negative effects on both morale and organizational trust.

Vulnerable Workers and Job Insecurity

It is important to understand which workers appear to be most at risk for negative outcomes of job insecurity. Several conceptual articles on job insecurity emphasize the importance of not only examining how job insecurity affects mental health, but also postulates who may be most affected. Bargal, Back and Ariav (1992), for example, theorize the·o·rize  
v. the·o·rized, the·o·riz·ing, the·o·riz·es

v.intr.
To formulate theories or a theory; speculate.

v.tr.
To propose a theory about.
 that older workers are at great risk and should receive heightened attention during periods of prolonged job insecurity. Likewise, Andolsen (1998) suggests the "new employability" model creates a situation for workers that place women, older workers and minorities at greater financial and psychological risk if they are displaced.

Few studies measure variations in the effects of job insecurity by different demographic and financial characteristics, however. Manski & Straub (2000) found that older, less educated workers who experienced job insecurity experienced fewer expectations of finding a good job if a job search became necessary. They also found that job insecurity was much higher for blacks than for whites. Other studies have simply measured who is at greater risk for job insecurity, but have not linked risk with outcomes. For example, Ferrie and associates (2005) found marital status marital status,
n the legal standing of a person in regard to his or her marriage state.
 significant in predicting feelings of job insecurity, with single persons twice as likely as married persons to report insecurity. D'Souza and associates (2003) found divorced, separated, and widowed persons most likely to experience job insecurity. Mauno & Kinnunen (2002) found women and economic stressors predicted greater job insecurity. No studies were found that specifically linked demographic variations in workers with mental or physical health effects of job insecurity.

To summarize sum·ma·rize  
intr. & tr.v. sum·ma·rized, sum·ma·riz·ing, sum·ma·riz·es
To make a summary or make a summary of.



sum
, few of the studies reviewed here were conducted in the U.S. Further, evidence of a cumulative effect of prolonged job insecurity on mental health is hampered by design issues. However, what evidence does exist is compelling and demonstrates that chronic job insecurity can, at the least, have a prolonged negative impact on workers. Further, there is some evidence that personal characteristics may make some individuals more susceptible than others to the negative effects associated with job insecurity. The present study examines the psychological effects of job insecurity at multiple points in time as well as examines individual characteristics of workers who may be more at-risk for these effects.

Research Questions

The research questions for this study will attempt to clarify and add to the knowledge base by examining workers' experiences of prolonged job insecurity in a manufacturing plant in the southeastern United States. The research questions are as follows:

1. Are job insecurity, financial difficulty and demographic characteristics of age, race, marital status, gender and number of children significant in predicting depression and anxiety?

2. Is there evidence of cumulative psychological distress associated with prolonged job insecurity?

Sample and Methods

This paper reports on a stratified stratified /strat·i·fied/ (strat´i-fid) formed or arranged in layers.

strat·i·fied
adj.
Arranged in the form of layers or strata.
 systematic sample of 112 workers from a garment manufacturing plant. The workers were originally subject to perceived job insecurity in 1998 as a result of their close proximity to a similar manufacturing plant that had closed just fifteen miles away. Initially, the workers in this sample were assured that their plant was not slated for closure. Seventy nine percent of the job insecure sample continued to be followed over a three and a half-year period, until they received notice that they, too, would be displaced.

Interviews were conducted every six months for a total of eight data collection periods. The project had six interviewers who received interviewer training. Each interview took approximately 45 minutes to 1-1/2 hours to conduct. The interviews asked about workers' financial status, emotional well-being, their feelings of job security, and collected demographic information.

Measurement

The dependent variables were measured using the depression and anxiety scales from the Symptoms Check List (SCL (1) (Switch-to-Computer Link) Refers to applications that integrate the computer through the PBX. See switch-to-computer.

(2) A file extension used for ColoRIX bitmapped graphics file format (640x400 256 colors).

(language) SCL - 1.
90-R, Derogatis, 1994). The clinical cutoff for both depression and anxiety was a standardized standardized

pertaining to data that have been submitted to standardization procedures.


standardized morbidity rate
see morbidity rate.

standardized mortality rate
see mortality rate.
 score greater than 62. The scales have been studied extensively for use in both psychiatric psy·chi·at·ric
adj.
Of or relating to psychiatry.


psychiatric adjective Pertaining to psychiatry, mental disorders
 patients and adult non-patient groups. The current study uses adult non-patient norms. There are also separate T-score transformations for males and females. Reliability coefficients in these groups were .90 for depression and .85 for anxiety. The instruments also have shown good convergent-discriminant validity. The SCL-90-R effectively discriminates between disorder categories of the structured Clinical Interview for the DSM III-R DSM III-R Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, Third Edition, Revised  and the Hamilton Hamilton, city, Bermuda
Hamilton, city (1990 est. pop. 3,100), capital of Bermuda, on Bermuda Island. It is a port at the head of Great Sound, a huge lagoon and deepwater harbor protected by coral reefs.
 Rating Scale for depression.

Independent and control variables for the job insecure workers included job insecurity, measured using a four point Likert-type scale; demographic variables, including age, race, number of children, gender and marital status; and a financial difficulty scale, measured using a 5-point Likert type scale developed by Conger and Elder (1994), ranging from "none" to "a great deal of difficulty" paying bills each month.

Analysis

Multiple regression Multiple regression

The estimated relationship between a dependent variable and more than one explanatory variable.
 analysis at baseline The horizontal line to which the bottoms of lowercase characters (without descenders) are aligned. See typeface.

baseline - released version
 examined differential effects of perceived job insecurity on depression and anxiety, simultaneously controlling for demographics The attributes of people in a particular geographic area. Used for marketing purposes, population, ethnic origins, religion, spoken language, income and age range are examples of demographic data.  and financial difficulty. Longitudinal analyses are depicted de·pict  
tr.v. de·pict·ed, de·pict·ing, de·picts
1. To represent in a picture or sculpture.

2. To represent in words; describe. See Synonyms at represent.
 graphically to show the trends in the measures of depression and anxiety at six-month intervals over a three and a half-year period of time, and to assess for the possibility of cumulative distress related to chronic job insecurity. Depression and anxiety were compared with the levels of job insecurity and financial difficulty over the same time period. Financial difficulty is included in the analysis to control for rival hypotheses that trends in depression and anxiety levels over time may actually result from financial difficulty rather than perceived job insecurity. Paired sample T-tests are used to examine the data for significant differences between each of the data collection points over the three and a half year study.

Results

Tables 1 and 2 present the demographic characteristics of workers in our sample and the scores on depression, anxiety, financial difficulty and job insecurity at baseline. In this sample, the workers were, on average, middle-aged (38.8 years old), with approximately one child in the home. Almost 70% of the sample were married or had a partner living in the home, and the average education was just under a high school diploma A high school diploma is a diploma awarded for the completion of high school. In the United States and Canada, it is considered the minimum education required for government jobs and higher education. An equivalent is the GED. . Ninety percent of the sample were white females. Approximately half of all respondents reported some to a great deal of financial difficulty and almost 2/3 of the sample experienced perceived job insecurity.

The first research question examines whether job insecurity, financial difficulty, and demographic characteristics are significantly related to depression and anxiety levels of workers. Since over 60% of our sample experienced job insecurity at baseline, we begin the analysis with the point at which job insecurity is high. Bivariate bi·var·i·ate  
adj.
Mathematics Having two variables: bivariate binomial distribution.

Adj. 1.
 correlations were run first to assess significant relationships between the independent and dependent variables (not shown). Those variables found significant were included in the multiple regression model, simultaneously controlling for the effects of the other independent variables in the model. Table 3 shows the significant variables in the model, with their unstandardized and standardized beta coefficients.

Job security and financial difficulty were significantly related to anxiety, explaining 33% of the variance in anxiety. Job security, financial difficulty, number of children and age were significantly related to depression, explaining 32% of the variance in depression. Interestingly, having fewer children and being younger were significantly correlated cor·re·late  
v. cor·re·lat·ed, cor·re·lat·ing, cor·re·lates

v.tr.
1. To put or bring into causal, complementary, parallel, or reciprocal relation.

2.
 with higher levels of depression. Since the sample consists of relatively older workers, many of their children may have already left home. However, the relationship between levels of depression and age contradicts the theoretical assumptions in the literature regarding job insecurity for older workers (c.f. Manski & Straub, 2000).

The second research question asks if there is evidence of the cumulative stress hypothesis regarding prolonged exposure to chronic job insecurity. Figure 1 and 2 graphically represent the sample's prolonged insecurity and its impact on workers over time. Figure 1 indicates that there is evidence of prolonged emotional distress emotional distress n. an increasingly popular basis for a claim of damages in lawsuits for injury due to the negligence or intentional acts of another. Originally damages for emotional distress were only awardable in conjunction with damages for actual physical harm.  over time, but not necessarily cumulative stress. Depression never significantly declined between any 2 data periods over the three and a half year period. Anxiety, on the other hand, did decline significantly between baseline and six months, and again between 2 1/2 and 3 years. Furthermore, in half the time periods, depression never went below the clinical cutoff for depression (> 62).

Figure 2 graphs the perceived job insecurity and financial difficulty during the same time period. Financial difficulty is included to rule out rival hypotheses that it might, indeed, be financial problems, rather than job insecurity that are causing the rise and fall of depression and anxiety. However, figure 2 illustrates that job insecurity shows the same downward trend as depression and anxiety, while financial difficulty remains relatively constant over time. In fact, workers reported less financial difficulty at baseline when their perceptions of their job insecurity were at the highest point before the final plant closure notice came. Furthermore, the only significant increase in financially difficulty between time periods was between six months and one year, at the same time job insecurity was declining slightly. Job insecurity followed a similar downward slope as the outcome variables. Feelings of insecurity began to significantly decline at the 1 1/2 year mark. The consequences to workers' mental health were varied. Anxiety significantly declined in two out of six data collection periods and depression never significantly declined. At the 3 1/2 year mark the workers were given notice that their plant would close; thus, the sharp increase in depression, anxiety and job insecurity.

Discussion and Implications

Three issues should be noted about figure 1 and figure 2. First, there is evidence of chronic emotional distress associated with feelings of insecurity. However, while job insecurity and anxiety did significantly decline, depression remained high. Second, there appears to be somewhat of a lag time effect. Insecurity began to rise again at the third year mark, but emotional distress remained at the lowest point since that particular period of insecurity began. The third issue is that at the 3 1/2 year mark there was a closure notice filed on this plant. As one would expect, job insecurity, depression and anxiety soared up to the highest level since the first plant had closed almost four years earlier.

The effects of prolonged insecurity did not become more potent as the time of exposure increased, as Heaney, Israel & House (1994) theorized. However, while job insecurity did subside significantly, as Armstrong-Stassen (2002) suggested, depression levels did not. The results in this study are more supportive of the findings of Dekker (1995) and Ferrie and Associates (2002) that indicate as long as the uncertainty remains, it continues to be associated with continuously high levels of psychological distress. In the current study, although both depression and anxiety subsided to some degree, neither perceived job insecurity nor depression decreased to acceptable levels for 2 1/2 years, putting workers and their families at risk for a multitude of stress-related problems. Moreover, during this 2 1/2 year period, workers jobs were, according to the company, secure. Not until the third year did stress levels begin to increase, probably due to rumors For other uses, see Rumor (disambiguation).

Rumors is a farcical play by Neil Simon.

At its start, several affluent couples gather in the posh suburban residence of a couple for a dinner party celebrating their tenth anniversary.
 that a plant closure notice was being considered.

The fact that younger workers with fewer children significantly correlated with depression is curious. It does not support current assumptions of workers who are hypothesized as most vulnerable to job insecurity. The baseline phase did support that financial difficulty was related to depression and anxiety, but longitudinally lon·gi·tu·di·nal  
adj.
1.
a. Of or relating to longitude or length: a longitudinal reckoning by the navigator; made longitudinal measurements of the hull.

b.
, financial difficulty did not show the same long term trends with either job insecurity or the outcome variables. This adds some evidence that longer term studies with multiple data collection periods are important to tease out tease  
v. teased, teas·ing, teas·es

v.tr.
1. To annoy or pester; vex.

2. To make fun of; mock playfully.

3.
 the differences in what is actually related to prolonged job insecurity and what is not. In other words Adv. 1. in other words - otherwise stated; "in other words, we are broke"
put differently
, it is quite likely that financial problems are related in general to depression and anxiety, but over time, the changes in depression and anxiety levels followed the changes in job insecurity, not financial issues.

While this study contributes to a greater understanding of the theoretical questions in stress research as it relates to job insecurity, it can only be generalized to a small group of blue collar workers. Much more research is needed to address demographic vulnerability to job insecurity.

Limitations and Further Research Needs

The current study would have benefited from a control group of stable workers, or a stable baseline phase before the neighboring neigh·bor  
n.
1. One who lives near or next to another.

2. A person, place, or thing adjacent to or located near another.

3. A fellow human.

4. Used as a form of familiar address.

v.
 plant closed. However, in the present climate, this type of stability in manufacturing may simply not exist. The study does, however, address some of the theoretical questions that have plagued the job insecurity research. Only one of the prior studies reviewed here assessed more than two time periods. This study was able to collect eight measures at six month intervals, allowing an examination of the process by which insecurity and psychological distress affects workers over time. It provides some evidence to support what others have theorized: that job insecurity has lingering lin·ger  
v. lin·gered, lin·ger·ing, lin·gers

v.intr.
1. To be slow in leaving, especially out of reluctance; tarry. See Synonyms at stay1.

2.
 and pervasive pervasive,
adj indicates that a condition permeates the entire development of the individual.
 negative effects on the well-being of workers, even as perceptions of insecurity begin to dissipate dis·si·pate  
v. dis·si·pat·ed, dis·si·pat·ing, dis·si·pates

v.tr.
1. To drive away; disperse.

2.
.

Further research is needed that collects data on job insecurity and its consequences at multiple time periods and in other contexts. First, different sectors of the economy should be assessed. Both of the U.S. studies were on blue collar workers. Second, researchers need to conduct studies with multiple time periods, both in the U.S., and in other countries. Because other industrialized in·dus·tri·al·ize  
v. in·dus·tri·al·ized, in·dus·tri·al·iz·ing, in·dus·tri·al·iz·es

v.tr.
1. To develop industry in (a country or society, for example).

2.
 countries have different labor systems and greater security for workers, it would be important to see if their outcomes were similar if they collected their data over multiple time periods. This is particularly intriguing in·trigue  
n.
1.
a. A secret or underhand scheme; a plot.

b. The practice of or involvement in such schemes.

2. A clandestine love affair.

v.
 since the only other country that did assess job insecurity over multiple waves (Canada), found quite different results than those countries that did pre and post tests. It is possible that countries providing greater safety nets for their workers may have better outcomes in the long run, even if some of their workers experience prolonged periods of job insecurity. Further development in this area would be helpful.

Finally, more research is needed to look at which demographic groups are most affected by job insecurity. The results in this study were unexpected and incongruent in·con·gru·ent  
adj.
1. Not congruent.

2. Incongruous.



in·congru·ence n.
 with theoretical expectations.

Conclusion

Perceived insecurity is largely due to factors outside the individual's control. It is linked to wider labor market adjustment to global competition and trade. Successful interventions will need to engage the economic and political systems. If current economic trends continue, the number of employees exposed to job insecurity will probably increase (Strazdins, D'Souza, Lim, Broom & Rodgers, 2004). The pressure on individuals and families is, in part, because of the absence of institutional structures that could lessen less·en  
v. less·ened, less·en·ing, less·ens

v.tr.
1. To make less; reduce.

2. Archaic To make little of; belittle.

v.intr.
To become less; decrease.
 the insecurity felt by workers.

Government regulations are needed to prevent firms operating in a capitalist global context from structuring employment in a fashion that promotes greater short term profit at the expense of reasonable security for employees (Andolsen, 1998). Alternative institutional models found in advanced industrialized countries set health, pensions and other benefits through legislation in a universal manner. If U.S. policy makers are unwilling to regulate corporations, then stronger safety net policies are needed to create a sense of security for workers in a volatile market. Corporations should share the cost of this security, since they will also likely benefit from a healthier workforce. Given the instability of our economic market and the inadequacy of current employment and earnings policies to produce secure employment in the U.S., sound social welfare policy is imperative to ensure a safety net for families in an uncertain employment market. "The social safety net should not be viewed as a series of residual programs that become unnecessary during times of economic affluence, but rather as a permanent cushion Cushion

In the context of project financing, the extra amount of net cash flow remaining after expected debt service.


cushion

See call protection.
 for vulnerable families" (Rocha & McCarter, 2003/4, p. 8.). Given the increasing uncertainty in a global market-place and the detrimental det·ri·men·tal  
adj.
Causing damage or harm; injurious.



detri·men
 impact that job insecurity has on individual and family well-being, a stronger safety net for families may be the only feasible way to provide a sense of security for families in the current economic environment.

References

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New York, Middle Atlantic state of the United States. It is bordered by Vermont, Massachusetts, Connecticut, and the Atlantic Ocean (E), New Jersey and Pennsylvania (S), Lakes Erie and Ontario and the Canadian province of
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n.
A person trained and educated to perform psychological research, testing, and therapy.


psychologist 
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1. a diseased condition or state.

2. the incidence or prevalence of a disease or of all diseases in a population.


mor·bid·i·ty
n.
, physiological physiological /phys·i·o·log·i·cal/ (-loj´i-kal) pertaining to physiology; normal; not pathologic.

phys·i·o·log·i·cal or phys·i·o·log·ic
adj. Abbr. phys.
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Same as offset. See base/displacement.
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A sharp, narrow mountain ridge or spur.



[French, from Old French areste, fishbone, spine, from Late Latin arista, awn, fishbone, from Latin, awn.
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The association has around 150,000 members and an annual budget of around $70m.
. (ERIC Document Reproduction Service NO. ED 302 752).

CYNTHIA ROCHA

University of Tennessee The University of Tennessee (UT), sometimes called the University of Tennessee at Knoxville (UT Knoxville or UTK), is the flagship institution of the statewide land-grant University of Tennessee public university system in the American state of Tennessee.

College of Social Work

JENNIFER HAUSE CROWELL

Virginia Commonwealth University Formed by a merger between the Richmond Professional Institute and the Medical College of Virginia in 1968, VCU has a medical school that is home to the nation's oldest organ transplant program.

ANDREA K. MCCARTER

University of Tennessee

College of Social Work
Table 1. Demographic Characteristics of the Sample

                              Job Insecure Workers
Variable                             n=112

Gender: % Female                     90.2%
        % Male                        9.8%

Race:   % White                      90.2%
        % Black                       6.5%
        % Asian American              1.7%
        % Other                       1.8%

Marital Status

% Married or Cohabiting              69.6%

% Single, Divorced, Widowed          30.4%

Average Number Children                .99

Average Education                  11.7 years

Average Age                        38.8 years

Table 2. Depression, Anxiety, Financial difficulty
and Job Insecurity at Baseline

                                Percent or Average

Average Depression Score              62.45 *

Average Anxiety Score                 60.63

% Reporting Financial Difficult       50.9%

% Reporting Job Insecurity            65.7%

> 62 consistent with clinical depression

Table 3. Multiple Regression Models Predicting Anxiety and
Depression for Insecure Workers at Baseline

Variables                   Dependent Variable
                                  Anxiety

                       beta     Standardized     T
                                    Beta        Test

Job Insecurity          4.382       .302        3.504 *

Number of Children     -2.339      -.182       -1.978

Age                    -0.170      -.143       -1.487

Financial Difficulty    5.818       .493        5.555 *

Adjusted R-Square              .332 F = 7.673 *

                             Dependent Variable
                                 Depression

                       beta     Standardized       T
                                    Beta         Test

Job Insecurity          3.454       .262        3.022 *

Number of Children     -2.403      -.207       -2.224 (+)

Age                     -.297      -.276       -2.839 *

Financial Difficulty    4.706       .440        4.918 *

Adjusted R-Square              .321 F = 9.529

* p < .01; (+) p < .05

Figure 1. Anxiety and Depression Levels Over Time

                Depression   Anxiety

Baseline *       63            60.6
6 mos.           62.4          58.3
1 yr.            61.6          58.1
1.5 yrs.         61.3          56.6
2 yrs.           62            56.6
2.5 yrs.         59.9          55.8
3 yrs.           59.5          54.5
3.5 yrs.         62.4          59.5

* p < .05 between waves for anxiety

Note: Table made from line graph.

Figure 2. Job Insecurity Over Time

                 Insecurity   Financial
                              Difficulty

6 mos. **          2.9         2.4
1 yr.              2.8         2.8
1.5 yrs. *         2.7         2.6
2 yrs. *           2.7         2.5
2.5 yrs. *         2.7         2.2
3 yrs. *           2.8         2.7
3.5 yrs. *         3.5         2.8

* p < .05 between waves for insecurity;

** p < .05 between wves for financial difficulty

Note: Table made from line graph.
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Author:McCarter, Andrea K.
Publication:Journal of Sociology & Social Welfare
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Date:Sep 1, 2006
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