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Workaholic, or just hard worker?
Evan J. Douglas, Robyn J. Morris
Career Development International
2006
394 - 417
1362-0436
10.1108/13620430610683043
Emerald Group Publishing Limited
Purpose – There is a lack of theoretical development on the question of why people work long hours and the nature of “workaholism”. This paper seeks to demonstrate a variety of reasons that induce a person to work “excessively”.
Design/methodology/approach – This paper discerns three subcategories of the “work enthusiast”: “materialist”, “the low-leisure” and the “perkaholic” hard workers. It is demonstrated that these work enthusiasts work long hours for relatively high job satisfaction, while workaholics gain relatively low job satisfaction. Inflicting negative externalities on fellow workers is argued to be a separate issue – any one of the hard workers might irk their fellow workers by working “too hard” or by their individual mannerisms. This paper uses the economist's utility-maximization model to build a conceptual model of voluntary work effort that explains the work effort decision of individuals.
Findings – Individuals will work long hours when motivated to do so by the satisfaction they derive separately and collectively from income (materialism); leisure; perquisites; and work
Originality/value – The paper advances the understanding of work motivation and workaholic behavior and presents a series of researchable propositions for empirical testing.
Hours of work, Motivation, Personality, Workaholism
Conceptual paper