Job stress in the United Kingdom: are small and medium-sized enterprises and large enterprises different?

  • Yanqing Lai
  • , George Saridakis
  • , Robert Blackburn

    Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

    Abstract

    This paper examines the relationships between firm size and employees' experience of work stress. We used a matched employer-employee dataset (Workplace Employment Relations Survey 2011) that comprises of 7182 employees from 1210 private organizations in the United Kingdom. Initially, we find that employees in small and medium-sized enterprises experience lower level of overall job stress than those in large enterprises, although the effect disappears when we control for individual and organizational characteristics in the model. We also find that quantitative work overload, job insecurity and poor promotion opportunities, good work relationships and poor communication are strongly associated with job stress in the small and medium-sized enterprises, whereas qualitative work overload, poor job autonomy and employee engagements are more related with larger enterprises. Hence, our estimates show that the association and magnitude of estimated effects differ significantly by enterprise size.
    Original languageEnglish
    Pages (from-to)222-235
    JournalStress and Health
    Volume31
    Issue number3
    Early online date3 Dec 2013
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - 31 Aug 2015

    Keywords

    • SMEs
    • work stress
    • job stressors
    • enterprise size
    • Business and management studies

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