Abstract

New types of work arrangements can be as dangerous as traditional unemployment for workers’ health Since at least the late 1970s, “flexible production” has commonly been considered as a positive and necessary innovation to ensure sustainable economic growth.1,2 The need to be “flexible” has been proposed for workplace technical systems, schedules and salaries, and “flexibility” has even been recognised as a positive feature of a worker’s personality. Increasing labour flexibility means reducing the constraints on the movement of workers into and out of jobs previously constrained by labour laws, union agreements, training systems or labour markets that protect workers’ income and job security.3 Within this context, one of the best-known outcomes of labour market flexibility has been the growth of “atypical” forms of employment and the decline of the “standard” full-time, permanent jobs. Thus, the standard full-time permanent job with benefits is now often replaced with different forms of non-standard work arrangements such as contingent, part-time contract, unregulated underground work or home-based work, many of which are characterised by variable work schedules, reduced job security, lower wages, hazards at the workplace and stressful psychosocial working conditions.4 There are a number of reasons why public health researchers should be concerned about the growth of non-standard employment relationships.5 Workers in flexible jobs share many labour market characteristics (eg, lower credentials, low income, women, immigrant and non-white) with the unemployed, while themselves experiencing bouts of unemployment, a factor strongly associated with adverse health outcomes.6,7 In addition, evidence suggests that these …

Keywords

UnemploymentFlexibility (engineering)Temporary workLabour economicsContext (archaeology)Job securityLabour market flexibilityWork (physics)MedicineSocial securityEconomicsEconomic growth

MeSH Terms

EmploymentHealth StatusHumansOccupational HealthPersonnel Staffing and SchedulingPublic HealthResearch

Affiliated Institutions

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Publication Info

Year
2007
Type
article
Volume
61
Issue
4
Pages
276-277
Citations
434
Access
Closed

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Social media, news, blog, policy document mentions

Citation Metrics

434
OpenAlex
9
Influential
277
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Cite This

Joan Benach, Carles Muntaner (2007). Precarious employment and health: developing a research agenda. Journal of Epidemiology & Community Health , 61 (4) , 276-277. https://doi.org/10.1136/jech.2005.045237

Identifiers

DOI
10.1136/jech.2005.045237
PMID
17372284
PMCID
PMC2652930

Data Quality

Data completeness: 86%