What Makes Work Meaningful and Why Economists Should Care About it

34 Pages Posted: 6 Apr 2020 Last revised: 6 May 2025

Abstract

We demonstrate why meaningful work, i.e. job-related activities that individuals view as purposeful and worthwhile, matters to labour economists. Building on self-determination theory, which specifies the roles of autonomy, competence, and relatedness as preconditions for motivation, we are the first to explore the determinants of work meaningfulness. Specifically, using three waves of the European Working Conditions Survey, we show that autonomy, competence, and relatedness explain about 60 percent of the variation in work meaningfulness perceptions. Meanwhile, extrinsic factors, such as income, benefits, and performance pay, are relatively unimportant. Meaningful work also predicts absenteeism, skills training, and retirement intentions, which highlights the concept's economic significance. We provide new insights that could help organise the future of work in a meaningful and dignifying way and propose concrete avenues for future research on meaningful work in economics.

Keywords: labour economics, non-monetary benefits of work, motivation, meaningful work, labour market outcomes, self-determination theory

JEL Classification: J01, J30, J32, J81, I30, I31, M50

Suggested Citation

Nikolova, Milena and Cnossen, Femke, What Makes Work Meaningful and Why Economists Should Care About it. IZA Discussion Paper No. 13112, Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=3568317

Femke Cnossen

University of Groningen

P.O. Box 800
9700 AH Groningen, 9700 AV
Netherlands

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