Your criminal record could make you stay longer in your job

Daily News Egypt
4 Min Read

When you go to join a new job they normally ask for your criminal record, and if that record is positive you could lose the job. This is not a rule, according to a new study, which points out that in sales and customer service positions, employees with criminal records may stay in their jobs longer and be less likely to leave.

According to a study published in the IZA Journal of Labour Policy, researchers at Northwestern University investigated the possible relationship between having a criminal record and job performance by evaluating data from employees in sales or customer service jobs in call centres in the US. They found employees with a criminal record stayed in their roles on average 19 days longer than those who did not have a criminal record.

Authors of the study suggest that employees with a criminal record may stay in their jobs longer because they have fewer job prospects outside of their current role.

“In sales and customer service positions, turnover is a major labour cost. Our study found that employees with criminal records had a longer tenure and were less likely to quit their jobs voluntarily than other workers. This finding suggests that individuals with a criminal record represent an untapped productivity pool,” Deborah Weiss, the corresponding author of the study explained.

Weiss added that: “job applicants with criminal records are much less likely than others to receive an offer of employment. Six months after release from prison, 50-80% of the formerly incarcerated remain unemployed. Some of those who are offered employment may stay longer because they have no other options and others may feel a sense of loyalty or gratitude to an employer who has given them a second chance.”

To reach to their findings, the researchers used data on 58,977 applicants hired for sales or customer service jobs in call centres in the US, collected by a hiring consultancy from May 2008 to January 2014. The authors evaluated possible associations between having a criminal record or not having a criminal record and job performance, misconduct and time spent in the job.

The authors caution that the study only evaluated data from those working in the sales and customer service jobs, which may limit the generalisability of the results outside of these positions. The observational nature of this study does not allow for conclusions about cause and effect.

Findings of the study have also found a 34% increased chance of misconduct in sales jobs for employees with a criminal record, but not in customer service jobs, which may suggest that performance and tenure for employees with a criminal record may be better in customer service roles than sales roles. The authors suggest that despite this higher misconduct rate, sales employees with a criminal record may be a good investment for employers.

The researchers of the study estimated that hiring a worker with a criminal record for a sales job increased expected theft-related costs by about $43, while saving the same employer about $746 in turnover costs on that worker.

The corresponding author added that “finding gainful employment for individuals with a criminal background is an important public priority: without such employment, reoffending is almost inevitable. While our study may not entirely dispel employers’ fears that hiring applicants with a criminal record may carry risks, our findings suggest that there are unexploited opportunities to hiring applicants with a record in a way that makes sense both on efficiency and on moral grounds.”

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