This article deals with the puzzle of the well-known gap between, actual and preferred working hours (i.e. over-employment). We propose a new explanation based on selective attention in decision making and test it with the Time Competition Survey 2003 which includes information of 1114 employees in 30 Dutch organizations. We find very limited support for the hypotheses that over-employment is caused by restrictions imposed by the employer (traditional lumpiness). Instead, we find much empirical support for our hypothesis on a new form of lumpiness that is related to selective attention and is created by work characteristics of 'post-Fordist' job design. In this work organization, the increased autonomy of workers is leading to an autonomy p...
Studies of workers engaged in patterns of long working hours increasingly draw on working-time prefe...
The Dutch labour market differs from that of other countries due to a unique combination of high emp...
The Dutch labour market differs from that of other countries due to a unique combination of high emp...
This article deals with the puzzle of the well-known gap between, actual and preferred working hours...
Recent case studies consistently show that employees in contemporary work structures (often referred...
Recent case studies consistently show that employees in contemporary work structures (often referred...
Even though the Dutch working week has become shorter and more diverse over the last decades, not al...
Over the past century, the length of the average workweek in developed countries has gradually decli...
In this article, we look at explanations for why people want to change their working hours. We focus...
This paper analyzes the consequences of compulsory reductions in working time on employment. The fir...
The goal of this article is to explain cross-country differences in over- and under-employment. The ...
A 40-hour working week is the norm in Europe, yet some organizations require 60 or more working hour...
Abstract: The goal of this article is to explain cross-country differences in over- and under-employ...
Studies of workers engaged in patterns of long working hours increasingly draw on working-time prefe...
The Dutch labour market differs from that of other countries due to a unique combination of high emp...
The Dutch labour market differs from that of other countries due to a unique combination of high emp...
This article deals with the puzzle of the well-known gap between, actual and preferred working hours...
Recent case studies consistently show that employees in contemporary work structures (often referred...
Recent case studies consistently show that employees in contemporary work structures (often referred...
Even though the Dutch working week has become shorter and more diverse over the last decades, not al...
Over the past century, the length of the average workweek in developed countries has gradually decli...
In this article, we look at explanations for why people want to change their working hours. We focus...
This paper analyzes the consequences of compulsory reductions in working time on employment. The fir...
The goal of this article is to explain cross-country differences in over- and under-employment. The ...
A 40-hour working week is the norm in Europe, yet some organizations require 60 or more working hour...
Abstract: The goal of this article is to explain cross-country differences in over- and under-employ...
Studies of workers engaged in patterns of long working hours increasingly draw on working-time prefe...
The Dutch labour market differs from that of other countries due to a unique combination of high emp...
The Dutch labour market differs from that of other countries due to a unique combination of high emp...