Frontiers in Psychology (Dec 2022)

Employability in the public sector: The impact of individual and organizational determinants

  • Brenda Vermeeren,
  • Beatrice Van der Heijden,
  • Beatrice Van der Heijden,
  • Beatrice Van der Heijden,
  • Beatrice Van der Heijden,
  • Beatrice Van der Heijden

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fpsyg.2022.1041618
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13

Abstract

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IntroductionThe importance of employability within organizations is increasing, due to various developments that initiate organizational changes. This study focuses on the employability in the public sector. While there seems to be a clear need for an employable public sector workforce, up until now there is little empirical research into the employability of workers in this sector, and into which specific individual and organizational characteristics influence it.MethodsWe conducted structural equation modeling, using data from Dutch public sector employees (n = 13.471).ResultsOur outcomes show that public sector employees consider themselves to be reasonably employable internally, and that they rate their external employability slightly higher. Moreover, it was found that both individual (personality and risk-taking behavior) and organizational characteristics (transformational leadership and red tape) influence their employability.DiscussionThese results underline the dual responsibility of the employee and the organization in influencing workers’ employability within the public sector.

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