Beyond the ideal: unravelling the complexities of overqualification, employee volunteering and job satisfaction

Publication type

Journal Article

Authors

Publication date

December 16, 2024

Summary:

Purpose:

This article examines the relationships between objective overqualification, volunteering as an extra-work activity and job satisfaction.
Design/methodology/approach

The study draws on a vast secondary sample of 20,686 British employees across four waves covering the period 2009–2017. The bivariate ordered probit estimate was used to test the study hypotheses in the bioprobit procedure in STATA.

Findings:

Our study unravels compelling insights. Overqualified employees experience lower job satisfaction and engage more in volunteering activities. The results emphasised that voluntary work allows the utilisation of skills and fulfils basic psychological needs, leading to enhanced general well-being and higher job satisfaction.

Practical implications:

Overqualified employees, by actively engaging in volunteering, not only make valuable contributions to society but also experience positive spillover effects that significantly influence their workplace attitudes and behaviours. This underscores the potential for promoting volunteering as an effective means to mitigate the private and social overqualification.

Originality/value:

This study provides valuable insights into the role of overqualification as well as resulting job dissatisfaction, in shaping volunteering decisions. This insight contributes to the overqualification literature and strengthens our understanding of volunteering as an important mechanism in the relationship between overqualification and job satisfaction.

Published in

Journal of Organizational Effectiveness: People and Performance

DOI

https://doi.org/10.1108/JOEPP-04-2024-0187

ISSN

20516614

Subjects

Notes

Online Early

#588460

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