Tuesday, June 16, 2009
If dad looks exhausted this Father's Day
it could be due to his job, suggests new research that found many male employees
are now pressured to work up to 40 hours of overtime—often unpaid— per week to
stay competitive.
Women face the same pressures, but family obligations
may force them to work fewer hours on the job, putting them at risk for
demotions or even firings.
The new findings, published in the journal
Gender & Society, add to the growing body of evidence that heightened
competition in the workplace, combined with modern business practices, are
resulting in near-unprecedented levels of overtime that may not even be
productive in the long run.
"This clearly does not ease the situation
for women and men who want to combine career and family-life," concluded lead
author Patricia van Echtelt and colleagues. "Moreover, a growing body of
literature shows that working long hours does not automatically lead to greater
productivity and effectiveness, and thus not necessarily contributes to
employers' needs but potentially harms the well-being of employees."
The
extensive study looked at the working habits of 1,114 male and female Dutch
employees. While the researchers indicate their findings could apply to other
countries, they chose to focus on the Netherlands, where outside family support,
such as childcare, has been unable to meet the growing demands.
Van
Echtelt, a Netherlands Institute for Social Research scientist, and her team
found that, among the survey respondents, 69 percent of all men worked overtime
versus 42 percent of women. Women who work overtime do so at a rate that is
about one-third lower than that of their male colleagues.
It's "usually
explained by the continuing trend for women to be more involved in unpaid family
work," the researchers noted. And even when partners share family chores, "men
often characterize their contribution as 'helping' their wives, without feeling
to have the main responsibility."
The researchers therefore predict
families with more kids and at-home responsibilities will become "more
constrained in their opportunities to indulge the 'choice' to work overtime."
Choice is turning into expectation at most companies built upon the
"team work" model, with pressures coming from project teams, responsibility for
meeting profit or production targets, imposed deadlines and employees left to
manage their own careers. A separate study at a software engineering firm, for
example, determined that interdependent work patterns, "a crisis mentality," and
a reward system based on individual heroics led to "inefficient work processes
and long working hours."
Cornell University's Youngjoo Cha, who led
another U.S. data-based study accepted for publication in the American
Sociological Review, found that if a husband works more than 60 hours a week,
his wife is 42 percent more likely to leave her position.
Cha, who
agrees with the Dutch findings, said, "The norm of overwork systematically
disadvantages women, who are less likely to work long hours because of the
expectation that they will have primary caregiving responsibilities and do more
housework than men."
In future, van Echtelt and her team hope that
businesses will value their "employees more for their efficiency and relational
skills and less for their crisis mentality and working long hours."
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Sociologists for Women in Society
And this is only for Dutch employees.
Imagine what the Singapore employee faces.