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Unemployment, Employability and COVID19: How the Global Socioeconomic Shock Challenged Negative Perceptions Toward the Less Fortunate in the Australian Context

Aino Suomi, Timothy P. Schofield, Peter Butterworth

2020Frontiers in Psychology31 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Unemployed benefit recipients are stigmatised and generally perceived negatively in terms of their personality characteristics and employability. The COVID19 economic shock led to rapid public policy responses across the globe to lessen the impact of mass unemployment, potentially shifting community perceptions of individuals who are out of work and rely on government income support. We used a repeated cross-sections design to study change in stigma tied to unemployment and benefit receipt in a pre-existing pre-COVID19 sample (n=260) and a sample collected during COVID19 pandemic (n=670) by using a vignette-based experiment. Participants rated attributes of characters who were described as being employed, working poor, unemployed or receiving unemployment benefits. The results show that compared to employed characters, unemployed characters were rated substantially less favourably at both time points on their employability and personality traits. The difference in perceptions of the employed and unemployed was, however, attenuated during COVID19 with benefit recipients perceived as more employable and more Conscientious than pre-pandemic. These results add to knowledge about the determinants of welfare stigma highlighting the impact of the global economic and health crisis on perception of others.

Topics & Concepts

EmployabilityUnemploymentCoronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19)PsychologyContext (archaeology)Socioeconomic statusPerceptionShock (circulatory)Social psychology2019-20 coronavirus outbreakSevere acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2)Demographic economicsSociologyMedicineEconomic growthEconomicsDemographyOutbreakPopulationVirologyInfectious disease (medical specialty)PaleontologyNeuroscienceBiologyInternal medicinePedagogyDiseasePathologyEmployment and Welfare StudiesCOVID-19 Pandemic ImpactsPersonality Traits and Psychology
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