Psychological factors contributing towards individual work performance among rohingya refugees and indonesian migrant workers in malaysia

As of 2019, Malaysia has about 1.87 million low-skilled migrant workers, with the majority from Indonesia. Likewise, there are about 180,000 refugees in Malaysia, especially the Rohingya from Myanmar. This study empirically determines whether Malaysia could replace a portion of the lower-skilled mig...

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Published in:Malaysian Journal of Consumer and Family Economics
Main Author: Ghazali M.S.; Tan P.-L.
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Malaysian Consumer and Family Economics Association 2021
Online Access:https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85115635360&partnerID=40&md5=6f4be2f15fbbd6171a8f9d9f42579270
id 2-s2.0-85115635360
spelling 2-s2.0-85115635360
Ghazali M.S.; Tan P.-L.
Psychological factors contributing towards individual work performance among rohingya refugees and indonesian migrant workers in malaysia
2021
Malaysian Journal of Consumer and Family Economics
27


https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85115635360&partnerID=40&md5=6f4be2f15fbbd6171a8f9d9f42579270
As of 2019, Malaysia has about 1.87 million low-skilled migrant workers, with the majority from Indonesia. Likewise, there are about 180,000 refugees in Malaysia, especially the Rohingya from Myanmar. This study empirically determines whether Malaysia could replace a portion of the lower-skilled migrant workers that Malaysia's economy depends on with a group of people indispensable by Malaysia by investigating their psychological factors contributing to individual work performance. Hence, this research distributed questionnaires to equal numbers of employed Rohingya refugees (n = 180) and Indonesian lower-skilled migrant workers (n = 180). The data were analysed using structural equation modelling– partial least square (SEM-PLS) method, SMART PLS 2.0 software. The results showed that that Rohingya workers' resilience attributes strongly influenced individual work performance, whereas self-efficacy attributes were the main contributor to Indonesian migrant's work performance. There were significant differences between the two types of migrants in terms of path coefficient. Hence, this implies that the impacts of psychological factors differed between various migrants backgrounds. The study fills a significant gap in comparing psychological behaviour between refugees and economic migrants like the Indonesians. In addition, this study clarifies the factors that are more effective in stimulating work performance according to the type of migrants. © 2021, Malaysian Consumer and Family Economics Association. All rights reserved.
Malaysian Consumer and Family Economics Association
15112802
English
Article

author Ghazali M.S.; Tan P.-L.
spellingShingle Ghazali M.S.; Tan P.-L.
Psychological factors contributing towards individual work performance among rohingya refugees and indonesian migrant workers in malaysia
author_facet Ghazali M.S.; Tan P.-L.
author_sort Ghazali M.S.; Tan P.-L.
title Psychological factors contributing towards individual work performance among rohingya refugees and indonesian migrant workers in malaysia
title_short Psychological factors contributing towards individual work performance among rohingya refugees and indonesian migrant workers in malaysia
title_full Psychological factors contributing towards individual work performance among rohingya refugees and indonesian migrant workers in malaysia
title_fullStr Psychological factors contributing towards individual work performance among rohingya refugees and indonesian migrant workers in malaysia
title_full_unstemmed Psychological factors contributing towards individual work performance among rohingya refugees and indonesian migrant workers in malaysia
title_sort Psychological factors contributing towards individual work performance among rohingya refugees and indonesian migrant workers in malaysia
publishDate 2021
container_title Malaysian Journal of Consumer and Family Economics
container_volume 27
container_issue
doi_str_mv
url https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85115635360&partnerID=40&md5=6f4be2f15fbbd6171a8f9d9f42579270
description As of 2019, Malaysia has about 1.87 million low-skilled migrant workers, with the majority from Indonesia. Likewise, there are about 180,000 refugees in Malaysia, especially the Rohingya from Myanmar. This study empirically determines whether Malaysia could replace a portion of the lower-skilled migrant workers that Malaysia's economy depends on with a group of people indispensable by Malaysia by investigating their psychological factors contributing to individual work performance. Hence, this research distributed questionnaires to equal numbers of employed Rohingya refugees (n = 180) and Indonesian lower-skilled migrant workers (n = 180). The data were analysed using structural equation modelling– partial least square (SEM-PLS) method, SMART PLS 2.0 software. The results showed that that Rohingya workers' resilience attributes strongly influenced individual work performance, whereas self-efficacy attributes were the main contributor to Indonesian migrant's work performance. There were significant differences between the two types of migrants in terms of path coefficient. Hence, this implies that the impacts of psychological factors differed between various migrants backgrounds. The study fills a significant gap in comparing psychological behaviour between refugees and economic migrants like the Indonesians. In addition, this study clarifies the factors that are more effective in stimulating work performance according to the type of migrants. © 2021, Malaysian Consumer and Family Economics Association. All rights reserved.
publisher Malaysian Consumer and Family Economics Association
issn 15112802
language English
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