Title of article
Job satisfaction and relative income in economic transition: Status or signal?: The case of urban China
Author/Authors
GAO، نويسنده , , Wenshu and SMYTH، نويسنده , , Russell، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2010
Pages
14
From page
442
To page
455
Abstract
We use two datasets for urban China to examine whether an increase in reference group income lowers or increases job satisfaction. The former is consistent with a status effect — an increase in the income of others lowers my satisfaction because I feel jealous. The latter is consistent with a signal effect — an increase in the income of others might make me jealous, but it also provides an information signal about my future prospects. When we use a single item indicator of job satisfaction we find no support for a status or signal effect; however, when we use a psychometrically valid instrument to measure job satisfaction, we find some support for the existence of a status effect. We consider the components of job satisfaction through which the status effect operates. We find that the status effect operates through satisfaction with co-workers, operating procedures, pay and supervision.
Keywords
Job Satisfaction , Urban China , Relative income
Journal title
China Economic Review (Amsterdam
Serial Year
2010
Journal title
China Economic Review (Amsterdam
Record number
1939880
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