Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
884923 Journal of Economic Psychology 2014 11 Pages PDF
Abstract

•We test self-determination theory in employed job search.•Job search resulting from autonomous and controlled motivation raise job find chance.•Only autonomously motivated job search leads to more satisfactory employment.•Policies aimed at deregulating the labour market will not assist career advancement.

Self Determination Theory (SDT) predicts that employees who use controlled motivation to search for alternate (better) work are less successful than their counterparts who use autonomous motivation. Using Australian labour market data, we find strong support for SDT. We find that workers who face externally regulated pressures (pressure arising from involuntary part-time or casual labour contracts) to search for alternate employment are less likely to find better work, than workers who use autonomous motives to search for work. Our findings suggest that labour market policies trending towards ‘labour market flexibility/deregulation’ – which provide workers with controlled motives to search for work – will contribute to workers cycling through spells of insecure employment and possibly intermittent spells of unemployment with no realistic prospect of career development.

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