Borooah, Vani (2019): Job Contracts. Published in: Disparity and Discrimination in Labour Market Outcomes in India No. Palgrave Macmillan (July 2019): pp. 133-162.
Preview |
PDF
MPRA_paper_101471.pdf Download (355kB) | Preview |
Abstract
This chapter considers the distribution of job contracts — in terms of casual jobs, temporary jobs (that is, those of less than a year’s duration), and permanent jobs — across different subgroups of the population. Although the analysis of chapter 5 echoes that of chapter 3, which is cast in terms of regular salaried and wage employment and casual employment, the novelty of chapter 5 is two-fold. First, it explicitly addresses the question of job tenure: while much of the regular salaried and wage employment discussed in chapter 3 may have been permanent employment, some of it may not have been. Second, and more importantly, it addresses the issue of “desirable jobs” using a data set different from the NSS data used in the earlier chapter (that is, unit record data from the Indian Human Development Survey relating to the period 2011–12). The Survey provides details about the job tenure of persons by distinguishing between three types of jobs: casual (daily or piecework), contracts of less than one year duration (hereafter, simply, “contract jobs”), and permanent. The importance of the analysis contained in this chapter is that if one defines job insecurity as workers’ fear of involuntary job loss, job insecurity has negative consequences for employees’ attitudes towards their job, their health, and the quality of their relationship with their employers.
Item Type: | MPRA Paper |
---|---|
Original Title: | Job Contracts |
English Title: | Job Contracts |
Language: | English |
Keywords: | India, Temporary Jobs, Permanent Jobs |
Subjects: | J - Labor and Demographic Economics > J6 - Mobility, Unemployment, Vacancies, and Immigrant Workers J - Labor and Demographic Economics > J6 - Mobility, Unemployment, Vacancies, and Immigrant Workers > J62 - Job, Occupational, and Intergenerational Mobility J - Labor and Demographic Economics > J7 - Labor Discrimination > J71 - Discrimination |
Item ID: | 101471 |
Depositing User: | Vani / K Borooah |
Date Deposited: | 07 Jul 2020 07:17 |
Last Modified: | 07 Jul 2020 07:17 |
References: | Bhambri, C.P. (2005), “Reservations and Casteism”, Economic and Political Weekly, 40: 806–808. Bourguignon, F. (1979), “Decomposable Income Inequality Measures”, Econometrica, 47: 901–920. Desai, S., Dubey, A. and Vanneman, R. (2015), India Human Development Survey-I, University of Maryland and National Council of Applied Economic Research, New Delhi. Ann Arbor, MI: Inter-university Consortium for Political and Social Research. Greenhalgh, L. and Rosenblatt, Z. (1984), “Job Insecurity: Towards Conceptual Clarity”, Academy of Management Review, 3: 438–448. Hartley, J., Jacobson, D., Klandermans, B. and van Vuuren, T. (1991), Job Insecurity: Coping with Jobs at Risk, Sage: London. Hirschman, A.O. (1964), “The Paternity of an Index”, The American Economic Review, 54: 761–762. Lazarus, R.S. and Folkman, S. (1984), Stress Appraisal and Coping, New York: Springer. Long, J.S. and Freese, J. (2014), Regression Models for Categorical Dependent Variables using Stata, College Station, TX: Stata Press. Macleod, W.B. (2010), Great Expectations: Law, Employment Contracts, and Labor Market Performance, Working Paper 16048, Cambridge, MA: National Bureau of Economic Research. Shannon, C.E. (1948), “A Mathematical Theory of Communication”, The Bell System Technical Journal, 27: 379–423. Sverke, M. and Hellgren, J. (2002), “The Nature of Job Insecurity: Understanding Employment Insecurity on the Brink of a New Millennium”, Applied Psychology: An International Review, 51: 23–42. Sverke, M., Hellgren, J. and Näswall, K. (2002), “No Security: A Meta-analysis and Review of Job Insecurity and its Consequences”, Journal of Occupational Health Psychology, 7: 242–264. Theil, H. (1967), Economics and Information Theory, Amsterdam: North-Holland. Thimmaiah, G. (2005), “Implications of Reservations in Private Sector”, Economic and Political Weekly, 40: 745–749. Thorat S., Aryama and Negi, P. (2005) (eds), Reservation and Private Sector: Quest for Equal Opportunity and Growth, New Delhi: Rawat Publications. Thorat, S., Tagade, N. and Naik, A.K. (2016), “Prejudice against Reservation Policies: How and Why”, Economic and Political Weekly, 51: 61–69. |
URI: | https://mpra.ub.uni-muenchen.de/id/eprint/101471 |