Scientific Papers

JOURNAL OF INTERNATIONAL STUDIES


© CSR, 2008-2019
ISSN: 2306-3483 (Online), 2071-8330 (Print)

2.8
2019CiteScore
 
83nd percentile
Powered by  Scopus



Directory of Open Access Journals (DOAJ)


Strike Plagiarism

Partners
  • General Founder and Publisher:

    SCImago Journal & Country Rank

  • Publishing Partners:

     


    The journal is co-financed in the years 2022-2024 by the Ministry of Education and Science of the Republic of Poland in the framework of the ministerial programme “Development of Scientific Journals” (RCN) on the basis of contract no. RCN/SN/0669/2021/1 


    University of Szczecin (Poland)

    Academy of Economic Studies in Bucharest (Romania)


     

    Széchenyi István University (Hungary)


     

  • Membership:

     

    Society for Scholarly Publishing (SSP)

    CrossRef

     

How vulnerable employment and public health quality shape labour productivity: A comparative study of European economies

Vol. 18, No 1, 2025

 

Serhiy Lyeonov

 

Department of Applied Social Science, Silesian University of Technology, Poland

Economic Cybernetic Department, Sumy State University, 

Ukraine 

serhiy.lyeonov@polsl.pl

ORCID 0000-0001-5639-3008


How vulnerable employment and public health quality shape labour productivity: A comparative study of European economies

Nataliia Sheliemina

 

Department of Marketing, Sumy State University, 

Ukraine

biletskayanat@gmail.com

ORCID 0009-0003-2120-0159


Zuzanna Szpakowska

 

Institute of Management and Quality Sciences, University of Justice Warszawa, Poland

zuzanna.szpakowska@aws.edu.pl

ORCID 0000-0002-1874-8696


Zoltán Bács

 

Faculty of Economics and Business, University of Debrecen, Debrecen, Hungary 

biletskayanat@gmail.com

ORCID 0000-0003-0612-658X

 

Abstract. The relationship between health indicators and labour productivity has been gaining increasing importance as European economies have come to navigate ageing populations, health-related absenteeism, and evolving employment structures. This study investigates how absenteeism, vulnerable employment, and Disability-Adjusted Life Years (DALYs) affect GDP per person employed across 21 European countries from 2000 to 2021. Employing a robust methodological framework – including Two-Way Fixed Effects, Feasible Generalized Least Squares, and Linear Mixed Models – the analysis accounted for heteroscedasticity, unobserved heterogeneity, and the panel structure of the data. The Linear Mixed Model was identified as the most reliable for interpreting outcomes based on model comparison criteria. The findings indicate that a 1% increase in absenteeism is associated with a 0.064% decrease in GDP per person employed. DALYs among older workers (aged 50–69) reduce productivity by 0.657% per 1% increase, while DALYs among younger workers (aged 15–49) show a marginally positive effect of 0.132%. Vulnerable employment has a marginally positive impact of 0.089% per 1% increase. In contrast, a 1% rise in the share of wage and salaried workers contributes to a 2.383% increase in productivity. These findings underscore the importance of strengthening health systems for ageing workers, reducing employment vulnerability, and promoting stable, formal job opportunities to support long-term economic performance.

 

Received: December, 2024

1st Revision: February, 2025

Accepted: March, 2025

 

DOI: 10.14254/2071-8330.2025/18-1/14

 

JEL ClassificationI15, J21, J24, J81, O52, C23

Keywordslabour productivity, health indicators, absenteeism, vulnerable employment, Disability-Adjusted Life Years (DALYs), European countries, panel data analysis