So, dear applicant, do you mean working from home or shirking from home?

 

Abstract

Many applicants want a job with the possibility of telework. However, the literature is unclear on whether being explicit about this wish and the reason for it leads to negative consequences on hiring intentions. In this paper we therefore investigate how expressing a desire for telework, for work-life balance and for productivity in particular, impacts the probability of receiving an interview and what it signals to recruiters. To this end, we set up a state-of-the-art vignette experiment in which recruiters evaluate fictitious applicants for different jobs. As a result of this experimental set-up, the answers to our research questions can be interpreted causally, and external validity benefits from the heterogeneity of the jobs. We find that if the desire for work-life balance is the stated motivation, the preference is punished more severely than if the motivation is productivity. Compared to applicants who do not mention a preference for telework, recruiters are 5.1 percentage points less inclined to invite applicants who pronounce this desire for work-life balance to an interview and 2.1 percentage points less inclined to invite applicants for whom the motivation is productivity. Lastly, mentioning a telework preference for work-life balance has a clear negative effect on anticipated achievement striving, commitment, and availability.

 

Citation

Moens, E., Verhofstadt, E., Van Ootegem, L., & Baert, S. (2023). So, dear applicant, do you mean working from home or shirking from home? IZA Discussion Paper Series, 16560.

 

Nice to know

  • An article on this work appeared in the Flemish newspaper De Standaard on 16 November 2023 (see also 'In the press')
  • An article on this work appeared in the Flemish newspaper Het Nieuwsblad on 16 November 2023 (see also 'In the press')
  • It received attention on the national radio channels Qmusic, JOE, and Play Nostalgie (audio clip from the radio news of Qmusic and Joe)
  • Poster presented at the ENESER Conference (European Network of Selection Researchers), Brussels (Belgium), 27-28 May 2024, where it won the Best Poster Award (click for program)
  • Paper presented at the FEB Research Day of Ghent University (Faculty of Economics and Business Administration) on 24 May 2024 (click for program)