Abstract

With the ongoing financial challenges being faced in the economic environment, research exploring financial and psychological well-being is of significant value because employees’ socio-economic behaviour affects productivity. Research emphasises mainly the effect of income level on psychological well-being, and its orientation to psychological well-being is narrowly derived from a focus on subjective well-being constructs. This study addresses the research gap by exploring the relationship dynamics between sense of coherence, income level and financial well-being. Secondary data were obtained from a cross-sectional online employee-wellness survey (n=7 185). The sample distribution included 66 per cent females and 34 per cent males from various age groups, with 46 per cent of the sample comprising single-household earners and 54 per cent sharing household income. Analysis of variance was conducted to examine the relationship dynamics between sense of coherence, level of income and financial well-being. Demographic variables that formed part of the survey results were included in the analysis. The relationships between sense of coherence and identified significant income level, financial well-being and demographic effects were further explored in Bonferroni multiple comparisons of means test and cross reference frequency tables that included Pearson’s chi-square and/or Cochran–Armitage trend tests. Detail results indicate that high-income employees exhibit a significantly stronger sense of coherence than low-income employees, and that, despite level of income, financial wellbeing is nevertheless positively related to sense of coherence. Results indicate important implications for managing a financially healthy workforce. Limitations are discussed and recommendations for future research are highlighted.

Highlights

  • Employee wellness is foundational to productive and profitable organisational functioning, because psychologically well individuals adopt effective and productive work–life strategies (Diener & Seligman, 2004)

  • In an initial step-wise regression analysis on the sense of coherence (SOC) scores, level of income, the Financial well-being (FWB) index, and the demographic variables of age, gender, population group, marital status, sole-/dual-earner status, number of dependants and work performance were included as explanatory variables

  • The fifth step of the analysis identified level of income, the FWB index, work performance (WP), age and earner as effects of the best-fit model

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Summary

Introduction

Employee wellness is foundational to productive and profitable organisational functioning, because psychologically well individuals adopt effective and productive work–life strategies (Diener & Seligman, 2004). Financial well-being, an aspect of employee wellness (Sieberhagen, Pienaar & Els, 2011), correlates with productivity on the job (Leary, 2009) and spills over to other areas of life with positive effect (Diener & Seligman, 2004). The author of the present paper posits that employees’ financial distress may become an organisational burden due to its negative effect on absenteeism and organisational commitment and the encumbrance of having to manage employee loans, garnishee-order administration and the risk of potential criminal behaviour such as theft and fraud. The large body of research on the “economics of happiness” (see Dolan, Peasgood & White, 2008) focuses predominantly on the effect of income level (wealth) on psychological well-being and led to the coining (Easterlin, 1947) and reaffirmation

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