Labor Market Affiliation of Marginal Part-Time Workers in Denmark — A Longitudinal Study
Anna Ilsøe og Trine Pernille Larsen has contributed to an article that examines the relation between marginal part-time work and future career opportunities
This longitudinal study examined the labor market affiliations of marginal part-time workers (<15 working hours/week) compared with full-time workers (32–40 working hours/week) within gender and age groups. Analyses were based on 1,492,187 Danish employees with marginal part-time or full-time work at baseline using register data of working hours and labor market affiliation from the Labor Market Account. We used the Expected Labor Market Affiliation method within gender and age groups to estimate the time spent in different labor market states over a 5-year follow-up from 2012–2017. The multistate model included five recurrent labor market states: work, unemployment, long-term sickness absence, studying, and temporarily out, and the results were adjusted for education level, morbidity, and ethnicity. A marginal part-time worker generally had fewer days of work without social benefits and spent more days studying during follow-up compared with a full-time worker. In addition, marginal part-time workers ≥ 25 years old had more days of unemployment and more days of long-term sickness absence. These findings suggest that marginal part-time workers have fewer paid workdays without social benefits compared with full-time workers, depending on age. Further studies should explore whether marginal part-time work is a stepping stone into or out of the labor market.
Read the full article 'Labor Market Affiliation of Marginal Part-Time Workers in Denmark—A Longitudinal Study' by Helena Breth Nielsen, Kathrine Pape, Laura Stonor Gregersen, Jonas Kirchheiner-Rasmussen, Johnny Dyreborg, Anna Ilsøe, Trine Pernille Larsen, Jacob Pedersen og Anne Helene Garde, published in International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health.