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Job-sharing in the South African labour market : its potential, feasibility and impact on unemployment, productivity and quality of work life

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dc.contributor.advisor Rall, P. J.
dc.contributor.author Ngambi, Hellicy Chakosamoto
dc.date.accessioned 2015-01-23T04:23:59Z
dc.date.available 2015-01-23T04:23:59Z
dc.date.issued 1999-02 en
dc.identifier.citation Ngambi, Hellicy Chakosamoto (1999) Job-sharing in the South African labour market : its potential, feasibility and impact on unemployment, productivity and quality of work life, University of South Africa, Pretoria, <http://hdl.handle.net/10500/17565> en
dc.identifier.uri http://hdl.handle.net/10500/17565
dc.description.abstract The primary aim of this survey is to: * explore whether there is potential for job-sharing in the South African labour market; * * describe the characteristics of potential job-sharers and to explain why Job-sharing would be an appropriate and feasible solution to unemployment, massive retrenchments, poor quality ofwork life (QWL) and low worker productivity Job-sharing has been used in many developed countries to address a variety of problems at the individual, organisational and national level. These include allowing workers to have a balance between their work and non-work life; to increase worker productivity and QWL and to increase employment opportunities. The literature survey affirms that these problems are prevalent in Africa as a whole and in South Africa specifically. The survey results reveal that the environment in South is Africa is conducive to jobsharing and that slightly over one third of the workers and organisations and two thirds of the jobseekers are willing to job-share. The results of this study also reveals that QWL, productivity and unemployment does influence the willingness to job-share and that approximately 80% of the employees would rather either job-share, work-share or opt for some other alternative than to have retrenchments. Thus by implication, job-sharing would address the problems relating to poor QWL, low worker productivity, fewer employment opportunities, as well as massive retrenchments in South Africa. The study has also explored possible reasons and obstacles to job-sharing and found that whether these are perceived as significantly important or not, depends on whether one is an employer, employee or job-seeker . The job-seekers feel more than others, that there is no reason insurmountable or obstacle preventing the introduction of job-sharing by which to avert their unemployed status. There are also differences in willingness to job-share among subgroups with regard to the industry, area of work, position held in the organisation and the availability of job-sharing positions in the organisation. This thesis reports that there is potential for job-sharing in the South African labour market, to address a variety of problems pertaining to workers, organisations, job-seekers and, therefore, the whole nation at large. en
dc.format.extent 1 online resource (xvii, 358 leaves) en
dc.language.iso en
dc.language.iso en
dc.subject Job-sharing en
dc.subject Quality of work life en
dc.subject Productivity en
dc.subject Unemployment en
dc.subject Employment opportunities en
dc.subject Lay-offs en
dc.subject Retrenchments en
dc.subject Alternative work schedules en
dc.subject Alternative work arrangements en
dc.subject Job-seekers en
dc.subject.ddc 331.25720968
dc.subject.lcsh Job-sharing -- South Africa en
dc.title Job-sharing in the South African labour market : its potential, feasibility and impact on unemployment, productivity and quality of work life en
dc.type Thesis
dc.description.department Business Management
dc.description.degree D.B.L.


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