The Relationship between Qualitative Job Insecurity and Meaningfulness at Work: The Mediating Effect of Job Crafting
Summary
In today’s cost-of-living crisis and rapidly changing modern organisational world (Patrick &
Pybus, 2022), the present study aimed to explore the relationship between qualitative job
insecurity (QJI), job crafting, and meaningfulness at work. Drawing upon the revised Job
Demands-Resources model (JD-R), it was expected that QJI would be negatively related with
meaningfulness at work and that job crafting would mediate the relationship between those
two variables. The final sample of the study consisted of 249 employees from various
organisations internationally, who participated in a quantitative cross-sectional research
design. To test the hypotheses, two regression analyses were conducted utilising the SPSS
system. As expected, the results revealed a negative relationship between QJI and
meaningfulness at work. Regarding the mediating hypothesis, this was partially confirmed
indicating that job crafting decreases the negative impact of QJI on meaningfulness at work.
Despite the limitations of this study, the findings are in line with the JD-R model and shed
new light to the empirical evidence around the study variables. Practical organisational
implications aiming at the prevention of QJI, through decision-involvement and employee
growth trainings, along with the creation of resourceful job crafting organisational
environments are highlighted.