Article

Personality change following unemployment

Details

Citation

Boyce CJ, Wood AM, Daly M & Sedikides C (2015) Personality change following unemployment. Journal of Applied Psychology, 100 (4), pp. 991-1011. https://doi.org/10.1037/a0038647

Abstract
Unemployment has a strongly negative influence on well-being, but it is unclear whether it also alters basic personality traits. Whether personality changes arise through natural maturation processes or contextual/environmental factors is still a matter of debate. Unemployment, a relatively unexpected and commonly occurring life event, may shed light on the relevance of context for personality change. We examined, using a latent change model, the influence of unemployment on the five-factor model of personality in a sample of 6,769 German adults, who completed personality measures at 2 time points 4 years apart. All participants were employed at the first time point, and a subset became unemployed over the course of the study. By the second time point, participants had either remained in employment, been unemployed from 1 to 4 years, or had experienced some unemployment but become reemployed. Compared with those who had remained in employment, unemployed men and women experienced significant patterns of change in their mean levels of agreeableness, conscientiousness, and openness, whereas reemployed individuals experienced limited change. The results indicate that unemployment has wider psychological implications than previously thought. In addition, the results are consistent with the view that personality changes as a function of contextual and environmental factors.

Keywords
unemployment; personality; personality change; well-being; Five Factor Model

Journal
Journal of Applied Psychology: Volume 100, Issue 4

StatusPublished
FundersEconomic and Social Research Council
Publication date31/07/2015
Publication date online09/02/2015
URLhttp://hdl.handle.net/1893/22084
PublisherAmerican Psychological Association
ISSN0021-9010

People (1)

Dr Christopher Boyce

Dr Christopher Boyce

Honorary Research Fellow, SMS Management and Support

Projects (1)