Employment arrangements and well-being of migrant live-in care workers: Evidence from a study of Polish live-ins in Berlin

Authors

  • Lena Hipp WZB Berlin Social Science Center
  • Sandra Leumann WZB Berlin Social Science Center
  • Ulrich Kohler University of Potsdam

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.18753/2297-8224-4435

Keywords:

migrant care work, live-ins, care agencies, working condition, respondent-driven sampling (RDS)

Abstract

This paper is the first to provide generalizable estimates on the economic and subjective well-being of 24-hour migrant care workers (“live-ins”) by type of work arrangement. In our empirical analyses, we draw on data from a survey on Polish live-ins working in Berlin selected via respondent-driven sampling (N=222), which allow us to compare live-ins who are contracted by care agencies with live-ins in other types of employment. The analyses show considerable differences in various outcomes between agency live-ins and nonagency live-ins. Compared to agency live-ins, nonagency live-ins are more likely to earn higher wages than agency live-ins but are more likely to report having less time to rest. It is therefore not surprising that we also find variation between agency and nonagency live-ins on different satisfaction outcomes. These findings have major implications for the regulation of migrant live-in care workers’ employment.

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Article

Issue 1/2024

Section

Thematic Section

Number

Article1.2

Language

English

Published

2024-06-28

License

Copyright (c) 2024 Lena Hipp, Sandra Leumann, Ulrich Kohler
Creative Commons License

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.