Goal engagement in coping with occupational uncertainty predicts favorable career-related outcomes
We investigated whether goal engagement and disengagement in coping with occupational uncertainty (e.g., perceptions of growing difficulties in career planning and lacking job opportunities) predicts three objective career-related outcomes: job loss, job finding, and income change. We also tested fo...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Journal of vocational behavior 2015-06, Vol.88, p.174-184 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | We investigated whether goal engagement and disengagement in coping with occupational uncertainty (e.g., perceptions of growing difficulties in career planning and lacking job opportunities) predicts three objective career-related outcomes: job loss, job finding, and income change. We also tested for the buffering effects of these coping strategies on the association between objectively unfavorable labor market conditions (as indicated by regional unemployment rates) and these outcomes. We used four-wave survey data from a longitudinal sample of 620 German adults aged 16–43years at the first wave and analyzed changes in the three career-related outcomes across 1294 pairs of successive annual waves. Analyses revealed that goal engagement predicted a higher chance of job finding over one year. Moreover, goal engagement buffered the association between higher regional unemployment rates and a higher likelihood of job loss, as well as a lower income, over one year. Goal disengagement predicted a lower income but had no other statistically significant effects. Thus, even in a relatively highly regulated labor market like the German one, goal engagement in coping with occupational uncertainty can contribute to objective career success.
•Coping with occupational uncertainty is linked to objective career outcomes.•Goal engagement predicts a higher likelihood of job finding.•Goal engagement buffers the effects of regional unemployment on job loss and income.•Goal disengagement hardly matters for career success. |
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ISSN: | 0001-8791 1095-9084 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.jvb.2015.03.001 |