Publication | Open Access
Job autonomy and job satisfaction: new evidence
62
Citations
31
References
2003
Year
Job SatisfactionPerceived Job AutonomyMotivationManagementEducationBusinessCareer ConcernJob PerformanceWorker Well-beingCareer EducationHuman Resource ManagementAutonomyJob AutonomyWork AttitudeOrganizational Behavior
This paper investigates the impact of perceived job autonomy on job satisfaction. We use the fifth sweep of the National Educational Longitudinal Study (1988-2000), which contains personally reported job satisfaction data for a sample of individuals eight years after the end of compulsory education. After controlling for a wide range of personal and job-related variables, perceived job autonomy is found to be a highly significant determinant of five separate domains of job satisfaction (pay, fringe benefits, promotion prospects, job security and importance / challenge of work).
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