FSD2133 ISSP 2005: Work Orientations III: Finnish Data
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Study title
ISSP 2005: Work Orientations III: Finnish Data
Dataset ID Number
FSD2133
Persistent identifiers
https://urn.fi/urn:nbn:fi:fsd:T-FSD2133https://doi.org/10.60686/t-fsd2133
Data Type
Quantitative
Authors
- International Social Survey Programme (ISSP)
- Blom, Raimo (University of Tampere. Department of Sociology and Social Psychology)
- Melin, Harri (University of Turku. Department of Sociology)
- Tanskanen, Eero (Statistics Finland)
Other Identification/Acknowledgements
- Borg, Sami (University of Tampere. Finnish Social Science Data Archive)
- Nieminen, Markku (Statistics Finland)
Abstract
The survey charts Finnish attitudes to work. All respondents were asked on which areas of life they would have liked to spend more and less time. Their opinions on the importance of different factors in their job and preferred employer and employment situation were studied. The respondents were also presented with attitudinal statements about work.
The respondents who were in gainful employment were asked whether they wanted to lengthen or shorten their working hours, whether they suffered from burn-out and whether they were able to organise daily work tasks themselves. The respondents' views on the importance of different aspects of a job were examined, such as job security, high income, opportunities for advancement and a job that allows working independently. The respondents were also asked how committed to their job they felt, how easy or difficult it would have been for them to find a new job and how easy or difficult it would have been for their employer to replace the respondent with a new employee. The respondents' opinions on the possibility of finding a new job in another organisation and losing their present job were examined. They were also asked to what extent they used IT equipment at work and whether they had a second job.
The respondents who were not in gainful employment were asked whether they had ever been in paid work for over a year, when their last gainful employment had terminated and what the main reason for the termination had been. The respondents' willingness to get a paid job and the likelihood of finding a new job were examined. Job searching methods, participation in further training of professional skills and the main source of income were surveyed.
Background variables included respondent's gender, year of birth, marital status, household size, education, economic activity, occupation, industry class, regular weekly working hours, employment type, managerial position, employer type, trade union membership, voting behaviour, religiosity, monthly income, subjective social class and type of location.
Keywords
employment; hours of work; job changing; job characteristics; job satisfaction; job security; occupational life; occupational qualifications; unemployment; work attitude; work-life balance; working conditions
Topic Classification
- Social sciences (Fields of Science Classification)
- Working conditions (CESSDA Topic Classification)
Series
ISSP (International Social Survey Programme)Distributor
Finnish Social Science Data Archive
Access
The dataset is (B) available for research, teaching and study.
Data Collector
- Statistics Finland
Data Producers
- University of Tampere. Department of Sociology and Social Psychology
- Statistics Finland
- Finnish Social Science Data Archive
Time Period Covered
2005
Collection Dates
2005-09-14 – 2005-11-30
Nation
Finland
Geographical Coverage
Finland
Analysis/Observation Unit Type
Individual
Universe
People aged between 15 and 74 living in Finland
Time Method
Longitudinal: Trend/Repeated cross-section
Data Sources
Variables denoting region of residence and language are based on register data.
Sampling Procedure
Probability: Systematic random
Classification order: municipality code and date of birth.
The sample size was 2,500 persons, out of which 94.8% were Finnish-speaking and 5.2% were Swedish-speaking. Seven persons lived abroad or their addresses were unknown. Therefore, the questionnaire was sent to 2,493 persons. 1,345 questionnaires were returned. There were 1,148 non-respondents, seven of them declined to answer.
Collection Mode
Self-administered questionnaire: Paper
Research Instrument
Structured questionnaire
Response Rate
54
Data File Language
Downloaded data package may contain different language versions of the same files.
The data files of this dataset are available in the following languages: English and Finnish.
FSD translates quantitative data into English on request, free of charge. More information on ordering data translation.
Number of Cases and Variables
134 variables and 1345 cases.
Data Version
2.0
Related Datasets
FSD3106 ISSP 2015: Work Orientations IV: Finnish Data
Weighting
The data contain two weight variables, which were created using a calibration method in order to improve estimation efficiency and to correct non-response bias. The weights are based on the following population distributions: 1) gender, 2) age groups (15-24, 25-34, ..., 65-74), 3) NUTS3 areas so that Greater Helsinki area was treated separately, and 4) municipality type (urban, semi-urban, rural). The first weight variable (paino_1) weights the results to match the whole Finnish population (the sum of the weights equals to the size of the Finnish population). The second weight variable (paino_2) does not produce this kind of extension (the weighted mean is 1 and the sum equals to the number of cases). Both variables are based on the same calibration process, only the scale is different.
Citation Requirement
The data and its creators shall be cited in all publications and presentations for which the data have been used. The bibliographic citation may be in the form suggested by the archive or in the form required by the publication.
Bibliographical Citation
International Social Survey Programme (ISSP) & Blom, Raimo (University of Tampere) & Melin, Harri (University of Turku) & Tanskanen, Eero (Statistics Finland): ISSP 2005: Work Orientations III: Finnish Data [dataset]. Version 2.0 (2018-07-19). Finnish Social Science Data Archive [distributor]. https://urn.fi/urn:nbn:fi:fsd:T-FSD2133
Deposit Requirement
Notify FSD of all publications where you have used the data by sending the citation information to user-services.fsd@tuni.fi.
Disclaimer
The original data creators and the archive bear no responsibility for any results or interpretations arising from the reuse of the data.
Other Material
See downloadable files at the top of the page.
Related Materials
The occupation classification is based on ISCO-88 (International standard classification of occupations)
Related Publications
Melin, Harri & Blom, Raimo & Kiljunen, Pentti (2007). Suomalaiset ja työ. Raportti ISSP 2005 Suomen aineistosta. Tampereen yliopisto. Yhteiskuntatieteellisen tietoarkiston julkaisuja; 3.
Henninen, Maria (2009). Peliä vai pakkovalintaa? Nuorten sitoutuminen ja luottavaisuus työelämässä 2000-luvulla. Turku: Turun yliopisto. Sosiologian pro gradu -tutkielma.
Hakamäki, Teija (2010). Työn epävarmuustekijöiden yhteys organisaatio- ja ansiotyösitoutumiseen. Sosiologian pro gradu -tutkielma. Helsingin yliopisto.
Pirkanmaan maakuntaohjelman 2011-2014 seurantamittareiden lähtötaso. Tampere: Pirkanmaan liitto. Sarja E; 19.
Vuorensyrjä, M. 2013. Work and Labor in Slow-Progressive Sectors of the Economy. Nordic Journal of Working Life Studies 3(1): 95-121
Ingrid Esser & Arvid Lindh. 2018. "Job Preferences in Comparative Perspective 1989-2015: A Multidimensional Evaluation of Individual and Contextual Influences", International Journal of Sociology." International Journal of Sociology 48(2): 27.
Leah Ruppanner, Rennie Lee & Matt Huffman 2018. Do Mothers Benefit from Flexible Work? Cross-National Evidence for Work Time, Job Quality, and Satisfaction. International Journal of Sociology 48(2): 17.
Van Hoorn, Andre. 2017. Social trust, workplace organization, and the comparative advantage of nations. Oxford Economic Papers 69(4): 897-917.
Monnot, Matthew J. 2017. The effect of incentives on intrinsic motivation and employee attitudes: A multilevel study across nations and cultural clusters. Thunderbird International Business Review online first.
Nelson, Diane M., Stoney L. Brooks, Arrvvind Sahaym, and John B. Cullen. 2017. Family-friendly work perceptions: a cross country analysis. Gender in Management: An International Journal 32(4): 300-316.
Yu, Wei-Hsin. 2017. Tradeoff or Winner Take All? Relationships between Job Security and Earnings in 32 Countries. Sociological Perspectives 60(2): 269-292.
Choi, G. 2019. Revisiting the redistribution hypothesis with perceived inequality and redistributive preferences. European Journal of Political Economy.
Tyrowicz, Joanna, and Magdalena Smyk. 2019. Wage Inequality and Structural Change. Social Indicators Research 141(2): 503-538.
Shoss, Mindy K., Bradley J. Brummel, Tahira M. Probst, and Lixin Jiang. 2019. The Joint Importance of Secure and Satisfying Work: Insights from Three Studies. Journal of Business and Psychology Online first.
Bullock, Justin B.; Hansen, Jesper Rosenberg and Houston, David J. . 2018. Sector Differences in Employee's Perceived Importance of Income and Job Security: Can These be Found Across the Contexts of Countries, Cultures, and Occupations? International Public Management Journal 21(2): 28.
Laffranchini, Giacomo, Si Hyun Kim, and Richard A. Posthuma. 2018. A metacultural approach to predicting self-employment across the globe. International Business Review 27: 481-500.
Jiang, Lixin, and Tahira Probst. 2017. The rich get richer and the poor get poorer: Country- and state-level income inequality moderates the job insecurity-burnout relationship. Journal of Applied Psychology 102(4): 672-81.
Probst, Tahira A, and Lixin Jiang. 2017. European flexicurity policies: Multilevel effects on employee psychosocial reactions to job insecurity. Safety Science Online first.
Dixon, Jeffrey C., Destinee B. Mccollum, and Andrew S. Fullerton. 2018. Who Is a Part-Time Worker Around the World and Why Does It Matter? Examining the Quality of Employment Measures and Workers' Perceived Job Quality. Sociological Spectrum 38(1): 1-23.
Hajdu, Gábor, and Endre Sik. 2018. Do People Have Different Views on Work by Age, Period and Birth Cohort? International Journal of Sociology 48(2): 17.
Study description in machine readable DDI-C 2.5 format
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