Reduced well‐being during the COVID‐19 pandemic – The role of working conditions

The COVID‐19 pandemic has had diverse impacts on the employment conditions and family responsibilities of men and women. Thus, women and men were exposed to very different roles and associated challenges, which may have affected their well‐being very differently. Using data from the National Educati...

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Veröffentlicht in:Gender, work, and organization work, and organization, 2022-11, Vol.29 (6), p.1969-1990
Hauptverfasser: Zoch, Gundula, Bächmann, Ann‐Christin, Vicari, Basha
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container_end_page 1990
container_issue 6
container_start_page 1969
container_title Gender, work, and organization
container_volume 29
creator Zoch, Gundula
Bächmann, Ann‐Christin
Vicari, Basha
description The COVID‐19 pandemic has had diverse impacts on the employment conditions and family responsibilities of men and women. Thus, women and men were exposed to very different roles and associated challenges, which may have affected their well‐being very differently. Using data from the National Educational Panel Study and its supplementary COVID‐19 web survey for Germany (May–June 2020), we investigate gender differences in the relationship between working conditions and within‐changes in subjective well‐being. We systematically consider the household context by distinguishing between adults with and without younger children in the household. The results from multivariate change‐score regressions reveal a decline in all respondents' life satisfaction, particularly among women with and without younger children. However, the greater reduction in women's well‐being cannot be linked to systematic differences in working conditions throughout the pandemic. Kitagawa–Oaxaca–Blinder counterfactual decompositions confirm this conclusion. Further analyses suggest that women's caregiving role, societal concerns, and greater loneliness partly explain the remaining gender differences in altered satisfaction. From a general perspective, our results suggest important gender differences in social life and psychological distress at the beginning of the pandemic, which are likely to become more pronounced as the crisis has unfolded.
doi_str_mv 10.1111/gwao.12777
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Further analyses suggest that women's caregiving role, societal concerns, and greater loneliness partly explain the remaining gender differences in altered satisfaction. 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source Wiley Online Library Journals Frontfile Complete; Sociological Abstracts; EBSCOhost Business Source Complete
subjects Caregiving
Children
coronavirus crisis
COVID-19
Employment
Female roles
Gender differences
gender inequalities
Gender relations
gender roles
Internet
Life satisfaction
Loneliness
NEPS‐C
Pandemics
Polls & surveys
Psychological distress
satisfaction
Social life & customs
Well being
Women
Working conditions
Young women
title Reduced well‐being during the COVID‐19 pandemic – The role of working conditions
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