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Would you like to work more hours? A investigation on South Africa

To begin with, Sustainable Development Goals are of tremendous importance in all areas, being seen as vital aims in all domains, which makes them indispensable when it comes to addressing the particularities of the labour market these days. Subsequently, human resources occupy a distinctive and uniq...

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Published in:Journal of risk and financial management 2022-10, Vol.15 (10), p.1-19
Main Authors: Popescu, Cristina Raluca, Kocağ, Esra Karapınar
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description To begin with, Sustainable Development Goals are of tremendous importance in all areas, being seen as vital aims in all domains, which makes them indispensable when it comes to addressing the particularities of the labour market these days. Subsequently, human resources occupy a distinctive and unique position when referring to the implications derived from targeting Sustainable Development Goals, especially in the context represented by the period specific to the COVID-19 pandemic and the international events that followed immediately after that. This study investigates the work motivation of individuals, and whether they would be willing to work more hours if they are paid. Motivation and attitudes towards working more hours might be affected by several factors, and they are important contributors to business performance. Not only business performance is to be affected, but this is also a part of Sustainable Development Goals where labour market conditions and productivity concerns are addressed, along with several other factors. Using the Quarterly Labour Force Survey from 2017 to 2022 that is conducted by Statistics South Africa, this study attempts to shed light on individual preferences for working more hours in the case of South Africa. Considering the dichotomous dependent variable, a binary response model is utilised to explore the determinants of such behaviour. Findings of the probit model reveal that socio-demographic factors such as gender, marital status, education level, and work experience are important indicators to explain this preference. More precisely, being female increases the likelihood of willingness to work more hours if paid by 1.1 percentage points, and being never married increases that probability by 2.7 percentage points. Within education categories, the highest coefficient in magnitude, having tertiary education decreases the probability of willingness to work more hours by 8.2 percentage points. As an important labour market indicator, one more year to commence working increases the probability of willingness to work more hours by 0.4 percentage points.
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source ABI/INFORM global; Publicly Available Content Database; EBSCO_EconLit with Full Text(美国经济学会全文数据库); Coronavirus Research Database
subjects business performance
Circular economy
Coronaviruses
Corporate Governance (CG)
Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR)
COVID-19
decent work
Economic growth
education
empirical findings
Employees
Employment
happiness
health
human resources
intellectual capital (IC)
International organizations
labour market
Medical research
Productivity
productivity growth
Quality of education
Quarterly Labour Force Survey
South Africa
Standard of living
statistics
Sustainable development
Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs)
well-being
Work experience
title Would you like to work more hours? A investigation on South Africa
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