Abstract

In this study, we examine employees’ perceptions of their work ability from a sustainable career perspective. Specifically, we investigate the role of a person’s perceived current fit (i.e., autonomy, strengths use and needs-supply fit), and future fit with their job as resources that affect perceived work ability, defined as the extent to which employees feel capable of continuing their current work over a longer time period. In addition, we test whether meaningfulness of one’s work mediates this relationship, and we address the moderating role of age. Our hypotheses were tested using a sample of 5205 employees working in diverse sectors in Belgium. The results of multi-group Structural Equation Modelling (SEM) provide mixed evidence for our hypotheses. While all four resources were significantly and positively related to perceived meaningfulness, only needs-supply fit was positively related to perceived work ability. Strengths use, on the other hand, was also significantly related to perceived work ability, yet in a negative way. These findings underscore the importance of distinguishing between several types of resources to understand their impact upon perceived work ability. Interestingly, the relationship between future-orientedness of the job and perceived work ability was moderated by age, with the relationship only being significant and positive for middle-aged and senior workers. This suggests an increasingly important role of having a perspective of future fit with one’s job as employees grow older. Contrary to our expectations, meaningfulness did not mediate the relationships between resources and perceived work ability. We discuss these findings and their implications from the perspective of sustainable career development.

Highlights

  • Work takes up roughly one third of the day for a large portion of the adult population, and this continues for a very large share of one’s life

  • We argue that experiencing meaningfulness in one’s work is important for career sustainability [6] and we empirically explore the role of perceived meaningfulness as a mediator in the relationship between resources and perceived work ability

  • A general measurement model was constructed for the total sample and this was compared to a single factor model to test for common-source bias [62]

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Summary

Introduction

Work takes up roughly one third of the day for a large portion of the adult population, and this continues for a very large share of one’s life. The influence of work is pervasive in many domains of life, and has important consequences for one’s life satisfaction [1], health [2], and subjective career success [3], to mention but a few. Current labor market trends such as increasing automization and robotization of work [4], and organizational contexts characterized by volatility, uncertainty, complexity, and ambiguity [5] challenge the extent to which employees experience a strong fit between their work-related needs and what their work offers them. Public Health 2019, 16, 2572; doi:10.3390/ijerph16142572 www.mdpi.com/journal/ijerph

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