Litcius/Paper detail

Consequences of job insecurity for hospitality workers amid COVID-19 pandemic: does social support help?

Muhammad Abbas, Mehwish Malik, Nosheen Sarwat

2021Journal of Hospitality Marketing & Management86 citationsDOI

Abstract

Using a time-lagged field survey, the current study examined the psycho-economic effects of job insecurity among hospitality workers during the recent pandemic of COVID-19. The study also examined social support as a buffering agent against the harmful effects of job insecurity. Data were collected from employees (N = 272) working in numerous hotels, restaurants, and travel agencies across Pakistan. Hierarchical moderated regression analysis was used to test the study's hypotheses. The results suggested that job insecurity was negatively related to self-esteem and positively related to economic deprivation. In addition, social support significantly moderated the effects of job insecurity on mental health, self-esteem, economic self-efficacy and life satisfaction such that the negative effects of job insecurity were stronger when social support was low. The results for economic deprivation, however, were contrary to the expectations, whereby job insecurity had a strong positive effect on economic deprivation in case of high social support.

Topics & Concepts

HospitalityPsychologyPandemicSocial supportJob satisfactionMultilevel modelJob insecurityDemographic economicsCoronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19)Test (biology)Hospitality industrySurvey data collectionJob attitudeSocial psychologyJob performanceEconomicsTourismPolitical scienceMedicineWork (physics)DiseaseInfectious disease (medical specialty)LawEngineeringPaleontologyMachine learningMechanical engineeringBiologyComputer scienceMathematicsStatisticsPathologyEmployment and Welfare StudiesCOVID-19 Pandemic ImpactsPsychological Well-being and Life Satisfaction