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      Employment insecurity and life satisfaction: The moderating influence of labour market policies across Europe

      1 , 2
      Journal of European Social Policy
      SAGE Publications

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          Abstract

          This article tests whether the link between employment insecurity and life satisfaction is moderated by the generosity of labour market policies across Europe. Employment insecurity provokes anxieties about (a) the difficulties of finding a new job and (b) alternative sources of non-work income. These components can be related to active and passive labour market policies, respectively. Generous policy support is thus expected to buffer the negative consequences of employment insecurity by lowering the perceived difficulty of finding a similar job or providing income maintenance during unemployment. Based on data for 22 countries from the 2010 European Social Survey, initial support for this hypothesis is found. Perceived employment insecurity is negatively associated with life satisfaction but the strength of the relationship is inversely related to the generosity of labour market policies. Employment insecurity, in other words, is more harmful in countries where labour market policies are less generous.

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          Most cited references77

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          Inference from Iterative Simulation Using Multiple Sequences

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            Subjective well-being: The science of happiness and a proposal for a national index.

            Ed Diener (2000)
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              A general multilevel SEM framework for assessing multilevel mediation.

              Several methods for testing mediation hypotheses with 2-level nested data have been proposed by researchers using a multilevel modeling (MLM) paradigm. However, these MLM approaches do not accommodate mediation pathways with Level-2 outcomes and may produce conflated estimates of between- and within-level components of indirect effects. Moreover, these methods have each appeared in isolation, so a unified framework that integrates the existing methods, as well as new multilevel mediation models, is lacking. Here we show that a multilevel structural equation modeling (MSEM) paradigm can overcome these 2 limitations of mediation analysis with MLM. We present an integrative 2-level MSEM mathematical framework that subsumes new and existing multilevel mediation approaches as special cases. We use several applied examples and accompanying software code to illustrate the flexibility of this framework and to show that different substantive conclusions can be drawn using MSEM versus MLM.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Journal of European Social Policy
                Journal of European Social Policy
                SAGE Publications
                0958-9287
                1461-7269
                October 2014
                September 15 2014
                October 2014
                : 24
                : 4
                : 383-399
                Affiliations
                [1 ]University College London, UK
                [2 ]University of Kent, UK
                Article
                10.1177/0958928714538219
                4ca964ac-2f1a-4528-97da-8ffe5d695bba
                © 2014

                http://journals.sagepub.com/page/policies/text-and-data-mining-license

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