2002
DOI: 10.1177/001979390205500203
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Why Do Contractors Contract? The Experience of Highly Skilled Technical Professionals in a Contingent Labor Market

Abstract: This study examines 52 highly skilled technical contractors' explanations, in 1998, of why they entered the contingent labor force and how their subsequent experiences altered their viewpoint. The authors report three general implications of their examination of the little-studied high-skill side of contingent labor. First, current depictions of contingent work are inaccurate. For example, contrary to the pessimistic "employment relations" perspective, most of these interviewees found contracting better-paying… Show more

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Cited by 262 publications
(228 citation statements)
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References 29 publications
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“…Similar trends have been found in studies on subcontracting in call centers (Batt, Colvin, and Keefe 2002), hotels (Hertz 2010), and school cafeterias (McCain 2009). Meanwhile, many high-skilled contract workers benefit from outsourcing as they frequently earn higher wages than their in-house counterparts (Houseman, Kalleberg, and Erickcek 2003;Kunda, Barley, and Evans 2002).…”
Section: Changing Firm-size Wage Effect Over Timementioning
confidence: 99%
“…Similar trends have been found in studies on subcontracting in call centers (Batt, Colvin, and Keefe 2002), hotels (Hertz 2010), and school cafeterias (McCain 2009). Meanwhile, many high-skilled contract workers benefit from outsourcing as they frequently earn higher wages than their in-house counterparts (Houseman, Kalleberg, and Erickcek 2003;Kunda, Barley, and Evans 2002).…”
Section: Changing Firm-size Wage Effect Over Timementioning
confidence: 99%
“…Along with the increasing use of fixed-term contracts, a whole range of so-called "alternative work arrangements" has developed to optimize the labor cost lowering trend and reshape human resource management in order to face cyclical movements as well as technological changes in the economy (Katz and Krueger 2016;OECD 2016). As stated by Smith (1997, 326-327) But flexibility takes a different organizational meaning when it comes to flexible high-skilled workers (Kunda et al 2002). Professionals are endowed with high qualifications that have market values outside the firm on a national or international scale.…”
Section: Dual Flexibility and Work Organizationmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…It has been argued by some that fixed-term and temporary employment affords employees a higher degree of flexibility and variety (Kunda et al, 2002;Marler et al, 2002). If fixed-term and temporary employment would indeed entail more flexibility for workers, it should be especially attractive for young mothers with children who aim to strike the balance between paid work and care (Krausz, 2000).…”
Section: Temporary/fixed-term Employmentmentioning
confidence: 99%