Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byAllyson Blankenship Modified over 9 years ago
1
Integrating Work and Family Life in Bulgaria Siyka Kovacheva and Stanimir Kabaivanov New Europe Center for Regional Studies Plovdiv, Bulgaria
2
Outline of the presentation : Background of the study Data and methods Descriptive results Results of the logistic regressions Conclusions
3
Public debates in Bulgaria before 2007- three separate discourses Negative population growth and dropping birth rate Work-efficiency and company competitiveness Unemployment and poverty
4
Research questions How do employees in the service sector in post- communist Bulgaria manage the integration of work and personal life? What are the main supports for achieving a work-life balance at the state, company and household level? How satisfied are employees with these opportunities?
5
The concept of integration of work and family life Individualised and reflexive perception of being able to manage the domains of one’s life in a self-fulfilling way. Not only individual attitudes but also wider social influences from households, companies, welfare state. Not only negative (lack of conflict) but also positive interface (enrichment). Bi-directional influence – from work to family life but also from family care to paid work.
6
The study in Bulgaria (part of the Quality project) http://www.projectquality.org Paper-based survey (spring 2007) Four Bulgarian companies (bank, hospital, supermarket, telecom) 789 respondents 146 indicators
7
Measures Stress from work and family life Work-family interference Work-family enrichment Satisfaction with work-family balance Independent variables: Individual characteristics (gender, age, education, health) Family context (household members, children, income) Workplace context (type of contract, workinghours, team work, parental leaves, work-family organisational culture)
8
Measures of work/life integrationRetailTelecomHospitalBank Stress 1.56 (0.67) 1.76 (0.61) 1.77 (0.64) 1.80 (0.63) Interference (work-to-home) 2.02 (0.72) 2.22 (0.58) 2.15 (0.56) 2.47 (0.63) Interference (home-to-work) 1.49 (0.50) 1.58 (0.48) 1.61 (0.57) 1.60 (0.52) Interference 1.82 (0.47) 1.94 (0.49) 1.93 (0.46) 2.54 (0.93) Enrichment (home-to-work) 3.42 (1.18) 3.25 (1.03) 3.64 (1.28) 3.22 (1.34) Enrichment (work-to-home) 3.15 (1.28) 3.12 (1.06) 3.56 (1.12) 3.14 (1.26) Enrichment 3.26 (1.08) 3.17 (0.95) 3.58 (1.11) 3.14 (1.21) Satisfaction Work-Life balance 3.40 (0.86) 3.19 (0.97) 3.49 (0.97) 3.02 (1.04)
9
Results from the OLS regression analysis (independent variable ‘satisfaction with WLB’ Age + Health status + Household income + Satisfaction with public childcare + Working overtime on a short notice – Long working hours - Teamwork + Organizational culture +
10
Conclusions o Long statutory paid maternity and parental leaves and available public childcare centres are the main forms of state support. o Low formal flexibility of work (part-time jobs, telework) is characteristic of the BG economy even in the service sector, matched with higher degree of informal flexibility at the workplace level. o Great role of family-friendly organisational culture (best in the hospital, worst in the bank). o Interesting lack of statistically significant correlation between WLB satisfaction and gender, shift work, number of children living in the household, the sense of equal sharing of household tasks. o We will test our model using the common data set for the 8 partner- countries to try to understand better the influences of supports and constraints of working people in Bulgaria.
Similar presentations
© 2024 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.