(*)Nélida del Carmen Castellano; (**)Esteban Damián López
(*)Facultad de Ciencias Económicas
  Universidad Nacional de Córdoba
  Córdoba, Córdoba, Argentina
nelicast@gmail.com
(**)Facultad de Ciencias Económicas 
Universidad Nacional de Córdoba 
Córdoba, Córdoba, Argentina
amian.lopez@quappro.com
Reception date: 08/28/2020 –  Revision date: 09/07/20 - Revision date: 10/06/2020 – Approval date: 12/15/2020 
DOI: https://doi.org/10.36995/j.visiondefuturo.2021.25.01.003.en 
ABSTRACT
Our line of research in 17 years has been Total Quality and its problems  in SMEs in Córdoba. Until now, we had not studied the concept of Quality of  Working Life (QWL).
  This project is part of a larger one that integrates the Current  Population Challenges Program, where we have included the QWL, since we  understand that a current population challenge is to study the factors that  affect it: unemployment, underemployment, labor precariousness, economic  crisis, gender issues that have not been overcome in years, preconceptions  about the lower capacity of female versus male decision making, among others.  In recent months, an additional factor, unthinkable and serious, as is the  quarantine by the Covid-19, has made the work of people and therefore this  concept even more complex.
  The study of QWL is a young field, where the authors do not agree on  identical dimensions and variables for its measurement. As a first stage, we  have compared updated studies and added factors by impact of Total Quality and  Covid-19 quarantine, to build a superior model useful for decision making and a  questionnaire, which we have tested in some organizations.
This project is part of the Current Population Challenges Program, where  we have included the Quality of Working Life (QWL), because we understand that  a current population challenge is to study the factors that affect it:  unemployment, underemployment, job insecurity, economic crisis, gender issues  that have not been overcome in years, preconceptions about the lower capacity  of female versus male decision making, among others. In recent months, an  additional factor, unthinkable and serious, as the Covid-19 pandemic, has made  the work of people and therefore this concept even more complex. 
  When searching for CVL background, there are numerous studies and  researches, with data surveys in the scope of organizations of specific  branches (there are numerous of the health sector), which have special interest  in using the concept of the QWL of their collaborators for the diffusion of  their good management. This is a young field of study, in which the various  authors do not agree on which the appropriate dimensions and variables for  measuring the QWL are. Therefore, we had to analyze several operational models  and complete them with other dimensions, so that it may be of real use in the decision-making  process of the organizations' managers.
  We consider this project as the first part of another one that will have  a greater scope and that will also address the gender differences in the QWL  which have not yet been solved.
From the above questions considered as triggers for our concerns for  this inquiry, it is possible to extract a more comprehensive question to  present it as the research problem, which is set out below:
  What are the dimensions and factors, or components, that best explain  and measure Quality of Working Life and what other components have emerged from  the changes in the Dynamic Processes (Continuous Improvement) and from the  Covid-19 quarantine?
To study the dimensions and factors or components that best explain and measure the Quality of Working Life. In addition, we want to know what new factors have emerged from the changes in Dynamic Processes (Continuous Improvement) and the Covid-19 quarantine, in order to elaborate a superior model.
The origins of the Quality of Life at Work (QOL) movement can be traced  to the work of the Tavistock Institute of Human Relations in London in 1947,  whose researchers applied a socio-psychological approach (application of  sociology and psychology to the study and resolution of social problems).
  The concept as such emerged in the seventies, when an intense concern  appears to improve the workers' work environment and the experiences of the  work itself, gradually shaping a movement oriented towards the study and  improvement of the QWL. In the U.S., this movement originated in a series of  conferences sponsored in the late 1960s and early 1970s by the U.S. Department  of Labor and the FORD Foundation, to address workers' protests against the  dehumanization of labor relations, following the organizational productivity  and welfare of workers. In Europe, the QWL movement appears united with the  movement for the Humanization of Labor with the common trunk in socio-technical  theory and with a greater emphasis on the welfare of workers, as the following  classic authors wrote: Maccoby, 1976; Larouche et al., 1983; Mateu, 1984; Sun,  1988; De la Poza et al. 1988, which we do not include in references because of  its antiquity.
  In its broadest sense, the QWL includes all the conditions related to  work, from schedules, salary, work environment, benefits and services, career  possibilities and human relations, which are relevant for work satisfaction and  motivation. It also covers the experiences of individuals in each job. In  short, the aspects of human experiences and organizational objectives must be  included, that is, under two major theoretical-methodological perspectives: the  quality of life of the work environment and the psychological QWL perspective.
  The objective of the QWL is to determine the aspects of the work that  affect the quality of life of a person, for that reason work in its multiple  expressions in the being and doing of a person that go beyond the salary,  therefore, it can be affirmed that it is of multidimensional character, in  addition, it implies the reproduction of society, the construction of identity  and sense of belonging, the possibility of recognition and social satisfaction. 
  In the international debate, the qualities of employment and decent work  have gained importance since the 90s, especially by institutions such as the  ILO and the UN. (Weller and Roethlisberger, 2011). The ILO in 2012, defined  that work is a source of personal dignity, family stability, peace in the  community, democracies that act for the benefit of all, and economic growth,  which increases opportunities for productive work and business development.
  Blanch i Ribas is one of the current European authors concerned with  providing answers, more or less innovative, to the old question of how to  achieve full employment. Growth, competitiveness, employment and quality of  life, are the fundamental aspects that he analyzes. He tries to define the  general terms of the contemporary debate about the impact of the new socio-labor  order on the quantity and quality of available employment and on social and  psychological well-being. He considers labor stability as a key to the quality  of life. (Blanch i Ribas, 2003).
Total Quality or Total Quality Management (TQM) applied especially in  the '90s has brought deep changes to the administrative discipline. No other  management philosophy or methodology has had such a strong impact on management  as Total Quality has. This topic has been one of our objects of study,  elaboration of articles and exhibition in events, from 2008 onwards. 
  It is a topic whose theoretical framework takes concepts from authors of  Administration and Total Quality Management, such as: Hill, Ch. and Jones, G.  (2011), Evans, J. and Lindsay, W. (2005), Fea, U. (1995), Pfeffer, J. (1995),  Riccardi, R. (1993) and Fernández, J. A. (2005). It also adds concepts  incorporating authors of Organizational Behavior, among others: Chiavenato, I.  (2007), Davis, K. and Newstrom, J. (2003), Gore, E. (2006) and Robbins, S.P.  (2017). Most of these works have been updated by their authors in recent years,  as they are in permanent consultation.
  The following groups of changes caused by the philosophy of Total  Quality in Administration are highlighted, which directly impact the Quality of  Working Life as we will see later:
  1. Changes in Organizational Structure 
  2.  Changes in the Functions of the  Administrative Process
  3.  Changes in the elements of the  Strategy
  4.  Changes in Dynamic Processes
For this work we are interested in deepening in the variables that shape human behavior (studied by behaviorism) called Dynamic Processes. These refer to the fluids that circulate through the structure of an organization, such as: leadership, motivation, conflict and communication. From the Total Quality Management, all of them have been modified with the superior objective of generating the Quality of Working Life. The main dynamic processes identified are the following:
Leadership has had to be adapted to work in teams where leadership  differs substantially from the management of individuals, who could be divided  to achieve the leader's goals. The synergy generated in the high performance  teams formed to fulfill the principles of Total Quality Management, exceeds the  knowledge of each person and even the leader himself. Leadership must adapt to  new leadership styles, such as the participation and involvement of all  personnel in pursuit of the higher goal of customer satisfaction. Nowadays, we  talk about Lean Leadership, which is the one necessary to conduct the processes  in which the Lean methodology has been applied (manufacturing, offices and  services) (U. Dombrowski, T. Mielke, 2014).
  Motivation, an inseparable companion of leadership, must follow the new  guidelines of Total Quality and be very transparent and genuine. Kaoru Ishikawa  always said in her courses to managers that when Quality enters an  organization, there is no more deceit and lies. The human needs that play on  motivation in the organization are numerous and the most effective method of  analysis (but also the most difficult) must be based on communication between  different colleagues: the cadres (hierarchical levels) must know how to listen  and open a dialogue with the employees. True Continuous Improvement must take  place in the basic daily task and in all departments. It must result from a  culture of improvement. The daily improvement must become a natural behavior of  all employees and directed by the will of personal development and sense of  achievement and not by monetary advantages, it is a superior motivation factor. 
  The conflict is no longer avoided or hidden, but requires strategic  treatment to eliminate its causes, or, once produced, reach a consensual  solution using, as far as possible, the techniques of negotiation that tend to  obtain win-win type results, after deeply knowing the needs of the parties in  conflict.
  Communication is now multidirectional and not just top-down, as has been  asserted for many years. Upward and lateral communications are also encouraged,  that is, between peers with whom work teams are formed. The process of  communication implies knowing the interlocutors and listening to them, which is  not possible without a good internal climate; it follows that the internal  climate and communication are very interdependent. Furthermore, communication must  be established in a spirit of sincerity and total transparency, with a clear  objective known to all.
  The information of interest to all members of the organization must  circulate naturally and freely. After the implementation of Total Quality  Management, the secrets and the implicit objectives and strategies, which only  exist in the mind of the owner or manager, come to an end. The dissemination of  information becomes an obligatory function for the hierarchical cadres. 
  The permanent training merged as a consequence of a cultural change,  where great importance is given to the training of the personnel in all its  strata. The ultimate meaning is that training has no end; new knowledge and  skills must always be learned. The objective of the system is also used to  evaluate the development of the employee. Before we build cars, we build people;  this proverbial Toyota phrase illustrates very well the great importance of  employee development. Therefore, employee development must be at the top of the  system's objectives. The process can only be as good as the employee. For this  reason, both must be developed equally. (U. Dombrowski, T. Mielke, 2014).
  The continuous learning is another expression of the cultural change,  which transforms the employees into beings deeply interested in all the  processes of the organization and in its continuous improvement (Kaizen), with  a permanent curiosity in the activities that surround them and in the  possibility of change and optimization. Learning must take place in short cycles.  Problem solving and learning must be done in a standardized way and based on  the PDCA or PHEA cycle (Plan, Do, Evaluate and Act). Numerous regular  repetitions and a science experiment approach to the various tasks are  essential. (U. Dombrowski, T. Mielke, 2014).
  In the Industrial Era, successful organizations were those that  increased their financial capital, which made them, grow and expand. Today,  however, successful organizations are extremely agile and innovative. We live  in the Information Era and financial capital leaves room for intangible and  invisible assets, called Intellectual Capital. One of the main components of  Intellectual Capital is Human Capital, that is, capital made up of people,  talents and skills. The physical capital is depreciated with the use, but the  value of knowledge increases every day more; the flow of knowledge of a person  does not diminish, it is complemented with the one of the others, that is why  the dynamic processes of permanent training and continuous learning acquire so much  importance, as features of a democratic and driving organizational culture.
  Riccardi (1993), a pioneer in management studies in Argentina, defended  that Total Quality Management should apply Total Quality Management to  processes and products, but also to human resources and the work environment,  in order to generate the Quality of Working Life, without which the first one  is not achieved, and he left already in those years, definitively installed the  concept of the Quality of Working Life.
  Pfeffer (1995) made clear his opinion about the importance of people in  the organization and stated that both Quality Management and Change Management  can only be successfully achieved through human resources. This thought reveals  the greatest intention of recognition for the workers. He counts among his  followers prestigious authors such as: Stephen Robbins, Martha Alles, Andrew  Dubrin, Enrique Franklin and Mario Krieger. Recognition is one of the main  factors or components of Quality of Working Life.
We have reviewed the publications of the last 10 years that try to  determine the components or factors that impact the Quality of Working Life and  to establish a measurement. Among these publications, we have selected those  that provide us with contributions to the conceptual framework and the  measurement methodology. 
  From the selected publications we  took the most complete tables with which we carried out the comparative  analysis, with the purpose of integrating the greater number of dimensions in a  superior model to investigate and measure the complex concept of the Quality of  Labor Life properly. We also added a publication on the effects of quarantine  by Covid-19 on people's work.
  Contributions of the selected  publications:
  a) González-Hidalgo-Salazar-Preciado (2010): Elaboration and Validation  of the Instrument to Measure Quality of Life at Work "CVT-GOHISALO. The  authors have made what the title of the article says, in a 7-dimensional  instrument with 74 variables to measure the CVT. This model has been widely  used until now because it has been validated and it is very complete. However,  the extension of the instrument (74 items) has always been presented as an  inconvenience, which led other researchers Pando, González, Aranda and Elizalde  (2018) to develop a short version (31 items), which was also validated.
  b) Granados, Isabel (2011): Quality of Working Life: History, Dimensions  and Benefits The author has made a theoretical compilation of the history of  the Quality of Working Life, as well as the various concepts that have been  developed around it, reviewing the most prominent works. The study of the Quality  of Working Life has been approached basically under two major  theoretical-methodological perspectives: the quality of life of the working  environment and the perspective of the psychological QWL. The perspective of  the quality of the work environment pursues the objective of achieving an  improvement in the quality of life through the achievement of organizational  interests. On the other hand, the perspective of the quality of psychological working  life shows greater interest in the worker. The variables studied are classified  as follows: Objective conditions: they are given by the analysis of variables  referred to the physical, technological, contractual and productive  environment. While the Subjective Conditions refer to the private sphere and  the labor world, organization and management function and benefits.
  c) Martinez-Oviedo-Luna (2013): Working conditions that impact on  working life.  They studied the variables  of working conditions that impact on the Quality of Working Life, collecting  publications over 20 years. They propose a conceptual classification scheme  (ECC) of the factors of working conditions:
  1. Environmental conditions: it involves aspects such as work  satisfaction, work risks, workload, among others. 2. Ergonomic conditions:  related to the work site where the employee develops his activities and the  well-being that it offers him. 3. Economic Conditions: aimed at the perception  of the worker with respect to the salary received. 
  They also mention: the psychosocial climate and the QWL and include  factors such as the conciliation of work and family life, work involvement and  state of mind. And finally: gender equality, safety and health at work,  flexibility at work, training and promotion possibilities, organization of the  working day and personal life, diversity and non-discrimination.
  d) Becerra Gualdrón (2015): Quality of Employment with a Gender  Perspective: Proposal for a Conceptual Framework. The author affirms that the  analysis of the QWL with a gender focus has a scarce approach, for this reason  she presents a very complete conceptual framework for its analysis. 
  The data provided by the authors mentioned in the extensive review are  very useful, the most important being Weller and Rothlisberger (2011) from  ECLAC, with the dimensions for Latin America. Finally, the author proposes a  measurement of the QWL based on this work and elaborates a questionnaire with  two parts: for the company and for the individuals, which is based on both  subjective perceptions and objective data, considering the multidimensionality  of the QWL concept.
  e) Cruz Velazco (2018): The Quality of Working Life and the Study of  Human Resources: A Reflection on their Relationship with Organizational  Variables. He wants to determine the main variables of the QWL. He searched these  following terms in scientific articles published in the last 7 years: QWL,  organizational variables, QWL and variables, QWL and relationships, reviewing  the most recognized databases. From this analysis he obtained tables with  relationships between independent and dependent variables that affect the QWL.  He concludes that, because of the variety of challenges to worker welfare, an  integrated approach to research is needed that can help improve the perceived Quality  of Working Life.
  f) Esbry, G. (04/07/2020): Teleworking: A new challenge for the world of  works. La Voz del Interior, Journal of Cordoba. Argentina. The Covid-19  quarantine has forced us to change many of our daily habits, including work; we  do it from home with the telework modality, also called home-office. According  to the Labor Indicator Survey (EIL) of the Ministry of Labor of the Nation,  before the pandemic, less than 8% of the workers did it remotely, 70.4% were  young men employed in Technological Services. Now more than 40% do so, reaching  peaks of 85%. Another interesting fact is shown by the International Network of  Education for Work (RIET), 63% of those who did telework would like to continue  with this form.
  Teleworking presents pros and cons for both companies and workers; for  the former it lowers costs and promotes greater productivity, but it  complicates the capacity for supervision and coordination. For the latter, it  reduces transportation times and costs and improves the balance between work  and personal life, but it is difficult to regulate work schedules and have the  necessary computer tools.
  If teleworking is installed as an extended modality, it may not be  enough with a law that guarantees the fulfillment of the obligations and the  labor rights, it will also be necessary to think about a new culture of work  that approaches in an integral way the relations between companies and  employees, and in which the home, the family and the technology will be bigger  protagonists than they showed until now.
The present investigation is of qualitative type, we used the  exploratory-descriptive and documentary methods, for which we reviewed books  and articles related to the subject of the last 10 years, to determine the  elements that conform the Quality of Labor Life, to compile and to systematize  the information from the background, different definitions, importance and  factors that impact it.
  Then we select the articles that contain models to determine and measure  the QWL. Finally, we carry out the Study and Comparative Analysis of the  diverse models and schemes that we have relieved of the selected bibliography,  with the purpose of constructing a refined and complete model that contains the  main dimensions of the models that have been analyzed and tested, plus other  dimensions of Continuous Improvement and Teleworking.
  In the section State of the Art, we detail the publications selected for  their interest in the contributions to the conceptual framework, to the new  conditions or components considered for the study of the QWL and to the  operational models that they present, considering the multidimensional nature  of the concept of QWL.
  From the theoretical framework of the Changes in the Dynamic Processes,  produced by the Total Quality, we carried out a table with the dimensions and  identified variables similar to the one of other authors, in order to be able  to compare it and add them to the new model, as well as the effects of the  quarantine by Covid-19 in people's work and therefore, in the Quality of Working  Life.
  In this way, we have elaborated a model that is as complete as possible,  due to the greater quantity and quality of the factors or components of the QWL  included, and which we hope will be useful for decision making.
  From this integrating model, we built a digital questionnaire containing  the dimensions indicated above and we carried out a pilot test of it to  determine the level of understanding of the questions, which was satisfactory.
Based on the review of the work done, we took the CVT-GOHISALO-2010  model as a basis for our comparative study, because it is validated and has  numerous precedents of its use in QWL studies. 
  In the comparison of the models analyzed in the work, we evaluated four  aspects: a) whether the model stated dimensions, b) whether it specified  variables within the dimensions, and c) whether the authors presented an  operational model, meaning an operational version of the variables in the form  of items or questions that can be evaluated. Finally, we considered, d) whether  the instrument had been validated and its reliability evaluated. This is shown  in Table No. 1 below:
Table No. 1: Comparative of studied operational models

Source: Own Elaboration
This comparative analysis has allowed us to choose the best model,  according to the following inclusion criteria:
  1. If the model includes an operational version, being the models of Becerra  and GOHISALO (in its two versions) those that fulfill this criterion.
  2. If the model has been validated  and its reliability evaluated.
  After applying the two defined criteria to the analyzed models, the two  versions of the GOHISALO model (2010 and 2018) were left. These models are the  ones that we took as a base to elaborate the superior model that we proposed as  objective of the present work.
  Likewise, we compared the two versions of the GOHISALO model with each  other, in order to finally choose one. The main advantage of the short version  of GOHISALO is that the total number of items in the questionnaire is reduced  from 74 to 31, and even so, the instrument remains reliable.
  In Table No. 2 we compare each dimension of both instruments and the  number of variables included in each one:
Table No. 2: Comparison of the dimensions of the GOHISALO models

Source: Own Elaboration
By going from 74 variables to 31, the total number of variables is  reduced by 58%. Having fewer variables considerably favors the realization of  the study. It is important to emphasize that the reduced model contains the  same dimensions as the original model but contemplating fewer variables in each  one of them (Table No. 2) and, as we mentioned before, without losing its  reliability.
  We also compared the dimensions of the Dynamic Processes with the  GOHISALO 2010 model, to see if they were included in it and we obtained Table No.  3.
Table No. 3: CVT-GOHISALO-2010 vs. Dynamic Processes

Source: Own Elaboration
We observe that in the Training and Learning dimensions (which  constitute Continuous Improvement), GOHISALO 2010 contemplates only 2 and 1  Dynamic Process variables, respectively. For this reason, we decided to  complete the proposed integrative model, with these two dimensions and with the  Telework dimension.
  Summarizing then, with the aim of achieving an operational model that  exceeds and integrates most of the dimensions identified as relevant to the  study of the QWL, we decided to use the model CVT-GOHISALO-2018 (Brief),  completed with a dimension referred to Continuous Improvement and another on  the impact of quarantine by Covid-19 on the work of people. It´s presented in Table  No. 4.
Table No. 4: Questionnaire (Superior Integral Model of Quality of Working Life)

Source: Own Elaboration
 We conducted a pilot test of the resulting instrument in order to  evaluate the understanding of the questions included. The results of this test  were satisfactory and are presented below:
  1. When asked how easy/difficult it was for respondents to answer the  questionnaire, 17% said it was very easy, 66% easy, 0% indifferent, 17%  difficult and 0% extremely difficult.
  2. Respondents identified the  following areas for improvement in their comments:
All this provides valuable information to improve the research instrument.
1. The Comparative Analysis allowed us to expand our theoretical knowledge about the QWL:
2. From this theoretical analysis of the models, it was possible to develop a transfer to a questionnaire as complete as possible to investigate and measure QWL:
As a subsequent stage to this project, it is foreseen the application of the questionnaire that has already been tested, for the study of the QWL in the organizations of the City of Córdoba. It is planned to work with a sample of the census of companies of the Production Ministry of the Province of Córdoba, selecting those located in our city.
REFERENCES
Please refer to articles in Spanish Bibliography.
BIBLIOGRAPHICAL ABSTRACT
Please refer to articles Spanish Biographical abstract.