Ekonomi Bisnis
Vol 11, No 2 (2006)

WORK STRAIN, ABSENCE, AND INTENTION OF QUITTING JOB - FROM A PERSPECTIVE OF OCCUPATIONAL DIFFERENCE

Kirk S. Chang (Lancaster University)
Teddy Oswari (Gunadarma University)



Article Info

Publish Date
26 Nov 2009

Abstract

This research investigated how occupations  influenced on stress and behaviors at work using questionnaire surveys (N = 613). Four heterogeneous occupations were recruited, including high school teachers, shop clerks, factory employees and civil servants. Civil servants reported more sources of pressures, shop clerks  reported higher levels of work strain, factory employees reported lower occurrence of absence behavior, and high school teachers reported lower intention of quitting job and higher working morale. The differences in stress and work behaviors across four occupations were due to two major factors. First, occupational differences, i.e., uniqueness and culture within the occupation. Second, individual demographics, i.e., marital status, education, job tenure, position rank and age. These individual demographics also offered account of differences in absence behavior,  intention of quitting job and low working morale across four occupations. Implications of the findings and suggestion for future research are discussed.  Keywords: occupation, stress and work behavior

Copyrights © 2009






Journal Info

Abbrev

ekbis

Publisher

Subject

Computer Science & IT Decision Sciences, Operations Research & Management Economics, Econometrics & Finance Social Sciences

Description

Jurnal Ilmiah Ekonomi Bisnis is a journal through a peer-review process. Jurnal Ilmiah Ekonomi Bisnis is intended for academics and researchers to publish their articles which is an original text that has not been published in another journal. The focus and scope are in the fields of management, ...