Work-Life Balance With Focus On Family Life
Work-Life Balance With Focus On Family Life
Work-Life Balance With Focus On Family Life
Methodology
Focus Group Discussion
Questionnaire to members of the Malta
Employers Association about working time
arrangements of their employees
A questionnaire to 480 workers
A questionnaire sent electronically to
employers asking them to explain the rationale
of the working time arrangement of their firms
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25- 39
56%
40- 49
54.3%
50+
74%
Occupational status
Shift Basis
54.2%
No fixed
Work on
starting and Saturday
finishing time
37.1%
50.6%
Work on
Sunday
46.5%
Family Life
(b) Work- Family Commitments: Can these two be
reconciled or do they lead to a feeling of being
squeezed between the two?
37.0%
Unmarried
22.2%
37.9%
25-39
40-49
50+
31.6%
37.0%
40.2%
20.7%
Manufacture
41%
30.5%
32.2%
Shift Work
31.1%
29.5%
Family Life
(c) Participation in Home-Based Social Activities.
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Often
Rarely
Never
13.4%
46.8%
39.8%
12.5%
63.5%
24.0%
2.3%
48.8%
48.9%
Shift Work
29.6%
57.4%
13.0%
30.6%
52.8%
16.6%
Work on Saturday
26.0%
57.1%
16.9%
Work on Sunday
34.9%
54.0%
11.1%
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Family Life
(d) Child Parent Interaction
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*There were only 6 respondents who work less than 40 hours per
week
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26.4%
38.9%
Shift Basis
32.5%
47.8%
28.6%
No fixed hours
52.9%
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Males 31%
Females 17%
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19.0%
30.2
46.5%
Shift
No fixed hours
21.3%
32.2%
29.4%
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56.7%
39.7%
30.1%
29.6%
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21
12%
35.5%
52.5%
Least hesitant
and
47%
36%
1.6%
6.7%
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Others:
Company has to operate within business hours
Company has to operate according to requirements of
clients
Mini buses
Flexi time
Flexibility and to meet exigencies of employees
To offer highest possible standard of service based on
guest requirements.
A compromise reached between preferences of
employees and production target
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Employers Views
Flexi Time and Reduced Hours
16 managers think that flexi time is unsuitable to their firm
25 managers think that reduced hours of work would create
problems
Reasons :
the disruptive element it would cause to production and
organisation of work
Added cost due to the additional workers who have to be
recruited for replacement
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Employers Views
Attempts made to change time schedule:
Cleaners to provide better service
To reduce overtime
To remove people from shift
Made life easier for employees and did not harm the
company
On request by employees, starting time changed from
7.00 a.m. to 6.00 a.m.
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Conclusions
The family occupies a very large part in the
non-work domain of individuals
Reconciliation of work with non-work domain:
40 to 49 age bracket consistently negative
25 to 29 age group not so consistently
negative but problematic
The over 50 age group overwhelmingly
positive
The young age group (16 to 24) moderately
positive
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Conclusions
Females tend to find it more difficult than men
to strike the ideal balance because of the
motherhood mandate which culture imposes on
the female parent.
Workers working more than 48 hours per week
and those with no fixed starting and finishing
time tend to share the same problems about the
relationship between work and non-work.
Ambivalence tends to prevail among a number
of workers especially those in the service sector
and those on a shift basis.
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Conclusions
The imperatives of the market leave little room
for managers to manoeuvre. Very few firms
can afford to go beyond the minimum
provisions laid down in labour legislation.
Will globalisation move people nearer to or
further from the ideal work-life balance where
the elements related to paid work and nonwork enable them to find ways of combining
working life with personal life?
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Thank you
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