학술논문

Improving health and economic security by reducing work schedule uncertainty
Document Type
article
Source
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America. 118(42)
Subject
Behavioral and Social Science
Sleep Research
Decent Work and Economic Growth
Humans
Sleep Quality
Uncertainty
Washington
Work Schedule Tolerance
labor
uncertainty
health
quality
job quality
Language
Abstract
Work schedules in the service sector are routinely unstable and unpredictable, and this unpredictability may have harmful effects on health and economic insecurity. However, because schedule unpredictability often coincides with low wages and other dimensions of poor job quality, the causal effects of unpredictable work schedules are uncertain. Seattle's Secure Scheduling ordinance, enacted in 2017, mandated greater schedule predictability, providing an opportunity to examine the causal relationship between work scheduling and worker health and economic security. We draw on pre- and postintervention survey data from workers in Seattle and comparison cities to estimate the impacts of this law using a difference-in-differences approach. We find that the law had positive impacts on workers' schedule predictability and stability and led to increases in workers' subjective well-being, sleep quality, and economic security. Using the Seattle law as an instrumental variable, we also estimate causal effects of schedule predictability on well-being outcomes. We show that uncertainty about work time has a substantial effect on workers' well-being, particularly their sleep quality and economic security.