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The changing workplace

It is often said that the days of life-long employment and corporate career ladders are gone. Many people feel their jobs are less secure than in the past.

But is that right? The international research reviewed by the Future of Work project doesn’t always support these concerns:

  • Some groups of workers have suffered a drop in job tenure, but long-term employment relationships appear to be more resilient than you’d expect.

  • Non-standard employment (part-time, temporary, casual and self-employed work) is on the rise, and that trend is likely to continue.

  • People’s need for flexibility is one of the key drivers of part-time and self-employed work.

  • However, some temporary and casual workers are more likely to suffer job insecurity, low pay and poor working conditions.

You can read more about the changing workplace in our stocktake or by looking at the articles elsewhere on this page.


Is work becoming more precarious?

The number of non-standard jobs - work that is not permanent and full-time is increasing in New Zealand and overseas.

Are these jobs also precarious, with poor conditions and prospects? Is any job always better than no job?


What’s “normal” about a 40-hour week?

The 40-hour working week isn’t as popular as it used to be, judging by New Zealanders’ current working patterns.

More people are working over 40 hours, and more people are also working less than the “standard” week, analysis by the Department of Labour shows.


What are we doing?

The Department of Labour is undertaking a number of initiaives to further issues in the workplace:

NZ Accommodation Providers: Impact of Technology on Labour

How is the adoption of information and communication technologies (ICT) affecting the use of, and demand for labour in the accommodation industry?


Has Organisational Change Contributed to The Growing Wage Gap?

Economists generally agree that technological change has widened the earnings gap between more and less educated workers. More recently, researchers have asked whether organisational change might be having the same effect. Recent research has explored the impacts of organisational and technological change on employment in manufacturing firms, and their implications for the skills workers need.


What Is the Real Story About Job Insecurity?

In the 1990s media interest in job insecurity reached high levels. Job insecurity was seen as a major new development in the modern workplace. But how bad were things really? A recent paper examines trends in a range of objective and subjective measures of job insecurity in Britain and the US over the past two decades. Read our summary.


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