Employment quality in the OECD Better Life Initiative Anne Saint-Martin Meeting of the Group of Experts on Measuring Quality of Employment 11-13 September 2013, Geneva The OECD Better Life Initiative (1) The two main pillars of the OECD Better life Initiatives 1. How’s Life?: a new OECD publication on well-being (published every two years) – Defines an operational framework for measuring well-being – Three main areas: material living conditions, quality of life and sustainability – Puts the emphasis on households and individuals – Concentrates on well-being outcomes, rather than on well-being drivers – Looks at the distribution of well-being across individuals – Considers both objective and subjective aspects of well-being. The OECD Better Life Initiative (2) The framework considers 11 dimensions for measuring current well-being: • Under material living conditions (3): Income and wealth; Jobs and earnings; and Housing. • Under quality of life (7): Health status; Work-life balance; Education and skills; Civic engagement and governance; Social connections; Environmental quality; Personal security; and Subjective well-being. 2. The OECD better life index • Cross-country comparisons on the 11 dimensions of people’s well-being • No synthetic index of well-being • Interactive tool on a dedicated website, where people can construct their own synthetic index by choosing the weights they want to give to each dimension, and then, can compare their country to other OECD countries Employment quality in the How’s life? Framework for measuring people’s well-being (1) Two dimensions of the HsL? framework are directly related to employment quality: • Material conditions: Jobs and earnings • Quality of life: Work-life balance Main criteria for selection of indicators: • Focus on summary outcomes (such as “good health status”) that can be easily understood • Are commonly used and accepted as well-being indicators within the statistical and academic communities • Ensure comparability across countries • Ensure maximum country coverage • Are collected through a recurrent instrument, i.e. are updated on a regular basis Employment quality in the How’s life? Framework for measuring people’s well-being (2) Headline indicators (6): satisfy most selection criteria • Jobs and earnings: employment rate; long-term unemployment; average gross annual earnings of full-time employees • Work-life balance: long working hours; time for leisure and personal care; employment rate of mothers with children under school-age Secondary indicators (5): satisfy several selection criteria but not all • Jobs and earnings: involuntary part-time employment; employees working on temporary contracts • Work-life balance: commuting time; satisfaction with allocation of time; work accidents. Employment quality in the How’s life? Framework for measuring people’s well-being (3) As compared to existing frameworks for measuring employment quality, very limited number of indicators. • HsL? framework is an outcome-based framework for measuring people’s well-being, not a comprehensive framework for measuring employment quality • Additional aspects that could also be considered in the HsL? framework: – Material conditions: role of “employment-related” social protection – Quality of life: role of workplace relationships and work organisation Employment quality in the How’s life? Framework for measuring people’s well-being (4) Difficulties in measuring the well-being outcomes of “employment related” social protection an example with employment protection legislation (EPL) • Summary outcome of EPL: job (in)security • Indicators most commonly used : share of temporary workers, share of workers with long job tenure, share of workers with short job tenure • Indicator retained in HsL?: share of temporary workers – Pros: obvious link with job insecurity as by definition, temporary contracts do not provide any guarantees as regards the continuation of the employment relationship – Cons: incomplete measure of job insecurity, notably in countries where regular employment is strongly protected Employment quality in the How’s life? Framework for measuring people’s well-being (5) Employment protection and incidence of long job tenure Percentage of workers with more than 10 years of job tenure 60 Percentage of workers with more than 10 years of job tenure 60 FRA 55 50 GRC FIN IRL 45 LUX POL 40 USA HUN ISL CAN 35 DNK SWE PRT AUT SVK 45 EST 40 NOR MEX EST IRL CHE NDL SWE POL FIN 35 DNK ESP HUN MEX CAN GBR USA ISL AUS 30 25 GRC NOR AUS 30 LUX CZE CZE PRT ITA 50 SVK ESP SVN DEU 55 DEU NDL AUT CHE GBR FRA BEL SVN BEL ITA Incidence of temporary work and long job tenure 25 0 1 2 3 4 Stringency of dismissal rules (index 0-6) 0 5 10 15 20 Share of temporary workers, as a % of employed population 25 Employment quality in the How’s life? Framework for measuring people’s well-being (6) “Employment-related” social protection: driver of well-being or wellbeing outcome? An example with unemployment insurance (UI) systems In a context of high and increasing job instability: • Current earnings may not adequately reflect the monetary benefits of having a job if workers are concerned about their future as well as their current material conditions • Over people’s working life, UI benefits can be seen as a component of employment-related income, in addition to earnings. • Therefore, UI benefits are not only a driver of well-being, but also an outcome variable But what could constitute a summary outcome of UI systems? Employment quality in the How’s life? Framework for measuring people’s well-being (7) Gross or net replacement rates? Initial phase of unemployment, single person without children who previously earned the average wage, 2011 Gross replacement rates (1) Net replacement rates (2) 90 80 70 60 50 40 30 20 10 0 1) Gross replacement rate: gross unemployment benefits received when not working as a percentage of previous gross earnings. 2) Net replacement rate: household net income during unemployment as a percentage of household net income while in work. Therefore, net RR takes into account the amount of cash benefits received (including social assistance) as well as the amount of taxes and social security contributions paid by the household, both during unemployment and while in work. Employment quality in the How’s life? Framework for measuring people’s well-being (8) Quality of life at work • “Work-life balance” dimension of the HsL? Framework mainly focuses on the balance between time spent at work and time available for personal and family life • Work may interfere with personal life through many channels, above and beyond time constraints • The literature on occupational health provides strong empirical evidence on the link between, on the one hand, the quality of work organisation and workplace relationships, and on the other hand, workers’ health and well-being Employment quality in the How’s life? Framework for measuring people’s well-being (9) Basic premise: what matters for people’s well-being at work is the balance between the demands they face, and the resources they have at their disposal to meet these demands • Job demands those aspects of the job that require sustained physical and psychological efforts • Job resources those job attributes that may be conductive to personal accomplishment or that are instrumental in achieving work goals. Employment quality in the How’s life? Framework for measuring people’s well-being (10) Job demands Components Underlying ESWC questions Work pressure Work usually more than 50 hours per week Not enough time to get the job done Working hours do not fit in with family and social commitments outside work Work at very high speed Work to tight deadline Emotional demand Handle angry clients. Job involves tasks that are in conflict with personal values. Job requires hiding personal feelings. Physical health risk factors Exposure to high noise Exposure to high temperature Exposure to low temperature Tiring and painful positions Carrying or moving heavy loads Workplace intimidation Verbal abuse Threats and humiliating behaviours Bullying or harassment Job resources Components Underlying ESWC questions Work autonomy Can choose or change the order of tasks Can choose or change methods of work Can choose or change speed or rate of work Able to apply own ideas in work Learning opportunities Employer provided training or on-the-job training Job involves learning new things Job involves solving unforeseen problems Tasks clarity Well-defined work goals Feedbacks from manager Manager good at planning and organising work Management practices Helps and supports from manager Feel respected as a person by manager Manager good at resolving conflicts Encouragement from manager to participate in important decisions Colleagues support Helps and supports from colleagues Feel “at home” at work Have very good friends at work Employment quality in the How’s life? Framework for measuring people’s well-being (11) Proportion of workers reporting that work impairs their health Job resources Job demands Workers with above average demand Workers with below average demand % 50 Workers with above average resources Workers with below average resources % 50 45 45 40 40 35 35 30 30 25 25 20 20 15 15 10 10 5 5 0 0 Work pressure Emotional demand Physical health risk factors Workplace intimidation Work autonomy Learning opportunities Task clarity Management practices Unweighted average across 22 countries: Austria, Belgium, Czech Republic, Germany, Denmark, Spain, Estonia, Finland, France, United Kingdom, Greece, Hungary, Ireland, Italy, Luxembourg, Netherlands, Norway, Poland, Portugal, Slovenia, Slovak Republic, Sweden. Colleagues support Employment quality in the How’s life? Framework for measuring people’s well-being (12) Proportion of workers reporting that work impairs their health 60 50 Cumulative effects: job strain Compensating effect of high resources 40 30 20 10 0 High job demands and low job resources High job demands and high job resources Low job demands and low job resources Low job demands and high job resources Pending and difficult question: how to construct a summary measure of job strain that be allow comparisons across countries? Employment quality in the How’s life? Framework for measuring people’s well-being (13) Number of days of sick leave 12 10 8 6 4 2 0 High job demands and low job resources High job demands and high job resources Low job demands and low job resources Low job demands and high job resources OECD project on “Defining, measuring and assessing job quality and its links to labour market performance and well-being (13) Mental health index (scale 0-5 from poor to good health status) 4.6 4.5 4.4 4.3 4.2 4.1 4.0 3.9 3.8 3.7 3.6 High job demands and low job resources High job demands and high job resources Low job demands and low job resources Low job demands and high job resources OECD project on “Defining, measuring and assessing job quality and its links to labour market performance and well-being (1) Timeframe: 2-year project, starting in Oct. 2013 Joint project: Statistics Directorate and Directorate of Employment, Labour and Social Affairs Key objectives of this project: • Reassess labour market performance whilst taking explicitly account of job quality in addition to the quantity of jobs • Provide a first attempt to examine the role of policies and institutions for the quality and quantity of job opportunities Main issue to deal with in this kind of analysis: multi-dimensionality of employment quality OECD project on “Defining, measuring and assessing job quality and its links to labour market performance and well-being (2) Focus on two broad aspects of employment quality employmentrelated material conditions and quality of life at work • Measuring these outcome variables Composite indicator of economic security? Composite indicators of job strain? Composite indicators or small sets of outcome variables? • Identifying the main determinants of these outcome variables • Understanding the relationships between these determinants Cumulative effects? Compensating effects? Thank you!