Abstract

This paper explores the association between job satisfaction and gender for workers with disabilities, using data from the Panel Survey of Employment for the Disabled, which interviews officially registered persons with disabilities in Korea. To take full advantage of the longitudinal data, we apply random-effects ordered probit models to investigate the underlying factors that affect gender differentials in job satisfaction. Our findings reveal that merely different work values between women and men do not account for the significantly higher job satisfaction among women. We suggest that workers' expectations play a role in explaining why female workers are happier in the workplace than their male counterparts; that is, holding other factors constant, women's expectations from jobs are lower than men's. This hypothesis is partially supported by the empirical analyses that gender differentials diminish among the highly educated workers, for whom there is less likely to be a gender gap in terms of job expectations.

Highlights

  • Over the last several decades, job satisfaction has been of interest to social scientists because it is closely related to conditions in the work environment and important in explaining worker productivity, absenteeism, and resignations

  • We explored the impact of work values on job satisfaction by observing the changes in the gender gap of job satisfaction when including the variables in the regression analyses

  • Using the Panel Survey of Employment for the Disabled (PSED), which restricts the sample to the population with disabilities, this article analyzed the association of job satisfaction with gender among disabled workers

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Summary

Introduction

Over the last several decades, job satisfaction has been of interest to social scientists because it is closely related to conditions in the work environment and important in explaining worker productivity, absenteeism, and resignations. Many studies have tried to explain the implications of the gender gap in job satisfaction using personal and job-related characteristics and subjective factors such as men’s and women’s different work values, relative utility, and expectations [2, 8,9,10]. According to their findings, objective variables, such as personal and job-related characteristics, help us to understand what type of worker is satisfied with what type of job, but not why women are more satisfied than men.

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