The Impact of the Covid-19 Pandemic on Perceived Employment (In)Security in Switzerland

Author:

Edler Susanne1,Staub Ivo1

Affiliation:

1. Sociology, Social Policy and Social Work , University of Fribourg , Fribourg

Abstract

Abstract The Covid-19 pandemic and the way this health crisis has been handled has changed labour market inequalities. We argue that workers are affected differently by changed work and employment conditions, depending on the workers’ employment relations and study the impact of remote work, polarization of the core, and peripheral workforce as well as changes in working time during the Covid-19 pandemic on perceived employment insecurity. Based on data from the Swiss Household Panel and its special wave (“Covid-19 Study”), our results show that the perceived employment insecurity is related to employment strategies aimed at increasing flexibility in the labour market. In particular, short-time work increased perceived employment insecurity.

Publisher

Walter de Gruyter GmbH

Subject

Industrial and Manufacturing Engineering,Environmental Engineering

Reference83 articles.

1. Anderson, Christopher J., and Jonas S. Pontusson. 2007. Workers, Worries and Welfare States: Social Protection and Job Insecurity in 15 OECD Countries. European Journal of Political Research 46(2): 211–235.10.1111/j.1475-6765.2007.00692.x

2. Arlinghaus, Anna. 2017. Wissensarbeit. Aktuelle arbeitswissenschaftliche Erkenntnisse. Mitbestimmungs-report No. 35. Düsseldorf: Hans-Böckler-Stiftung.

3. Arni, Patrick. 2020. IZA COVID-19 Crisis Response Monitoring – Switzerland (November 2020). Bonn: IZA – Institute of Labor Economic.

4. Atkinson, John. 1984. Manpower Strategies for Flexible Organisations. Personnel Management 16(8): 28–31.

5. Balz, Anne. 2017. Cross-National Variations in the Security Gap: Perceived Job Insecurity Among Temporary and Permanent Employees and Employment Protection Legislation. European Sociological Review 33(5): 675–692.10.1093/esr/jcx067

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