Friday, 5 June 2026

An example of asking generative AI to examine job security worries via the critical realism lens: for MBA students

An example of asking generative AI to examine job security worries via the critical realism lens: for MBA students

 

Are there any recent empirical study findings about job security worries of employees working in the Hong Kong retail? If so, what are the main empirical findings of interest to the field of business management?

There are some relevant recent empirical and survey-based studies on job security worries in Hong Kong, though most are economy-wide rather than retail‑only; however, their findings are very applicable to retail because front‑line, lower‑paid and precarious roles are consistently the most insecure segments.

Evidence on job security worries

·        A 2023 Workmonitor survey in Hong Kong found that 53% of employees worry they might lose their jobs, and 59% believe economic uncertainties will impact their job security, even though 78% still express confidence that employers will try to provide security.

·        A global workforce survey (including Hong Kong) in 2024–2025 reports that only about 22% of workers strongly agree their job is safe from elimination, and job insecurity is most acute among lower‑paid, repetitive‑task workers and those at the bottom of the hierarchy—categories that map closely to many retail jobs.

·        Hong Kong labour and manpower reports for retail highlight high staff turnover, difficulty filling front-line roles, and structural transformation (technology, automation, changing consumer patterns), all of which amplify perceived insecurity among retail staff.

These are not all “academic journal” pieces, but they are empirical (survey‑based) and often used as references in management and HRM research.

Key empirical patterns of interest to management

From these studies, several empirical relationships stand out as theoretically interesting for business management:

1.    Job insecurity → engagement, performance, turnover intention

·        Workers who feel secure are much more likely to be fully engaged, motivated and productive, and far less likely to intend to leave.

·        In sectors like retail where roles are easily substitutable and turnover is already high, job insecurity may create a vicious cycle: insecurity lowers engagement and service quality, which can hurt sales and further threaten jobs.
For an MBA‑level study, this links directly to JD‑R (Job Demands–Resources) and social exchange theory: insecure workers withhold discretionary effort.

2.    Job insecurity and mental health / anxiety

·        Research on precarious employment in Hong Kong finds that non‑standard contracts and long hours are associated with poorer mental health outcomes, including anxiety.

·        Retail jobs in Hong Kong are often characterised by shift work, long hours and variable contracts, so this suggests a pathway from employment conditions → perceived insecurity → anxiety and possibly absenteeism or presenteeism.
This is highly relevant to occupational health, burnout, and HR policy design.

3.    Economic uncertainty and structural change as drivers

·        Across studies, economic uncertainty and business transformation (e.g., restructuring, digitalisation, automation) are explicitly identified by employees as sources of job insecurity.

·        Retail in Hong Kong has been undergoing structural change: e‑commerce pressure, tourist‑flow volatility, and tech‑enabled services, so employees perceive that their skills or roles may become obsolete.
This is fertile ground for research on dynamic capabilities and strategic HRM: how retailers manage upskilling and redeployment to reduce insecurity.

4.    Job insecurity and employability / skill development

·        One line of Hong Kong research shows job insecurity acts as a moderator between perceived employability and outcomes: when people feel insecure, having higher employability changes how insecurity impacts satisfaction and turnover intention.

·        Other survey data show workers who believe they have the skills to advance, and who feel their employer invests in their development, are around five times more likely to feel secure.
For retail management, this frames training not just as a productivity lever but as a psychological safety and retention mechanism.

5.    Trade‑off between pay, mobility and job security

·        A Hong Kong survey indicates a sizable share of employees are willing to trade part of their salary for stronger job security, and job security ranks just behind pay and work–life balance as an employer attribute.

·        At the same time, recent data show a lower proportion of workers are willing to change jobs because they fear losing security in a volatile environment.
This connects to compensation strategy: in retail, employers might leverage more secure contracts or clearer career pathways instead of purely wage competition.

How this could shape a retail‑specific study

For an MBA or housing/urban‑context oriented management dissertation focusing on Hong Kong retail employees, these empirical patterns suggest several testable ideas:

·        Hypotheses about how perceived job insecurity affects:

·        service quality, customer orientation, and in‑store performance;

·        turnover intention and actual turnover;

·        psychological outcomes (stress, anxiety, burnout).

·        Mediators and moderators to examine:

·        perceived employability and opportunities for skill development;

·        contract type (full‑time vs part‑time vs agency);

·        adoption of technology/automation in the store, and communication about it.

·        Managerial practices to explore:

·        how transparent communication about restructuring or technology roll‑outs affects insecurity;

·        whether investment in multi‑skilling and training buffers the negative effects of perceived insecurity on engagement.

A useful strategy for your dissertation work would be to:

1.    frame job insecurity within established theories (JD‑R, conservation of resources, social exchange); and

2.    empirically test these relationships in a retail‑focused survey, while anchoring the discussion in the Hong Kong empirical patterns above.

To take this further for your dissertation, what angle sounds more interesting to you: job insecurity’s impact on service performance and turnover in Hong Kong retail, or how training and skill development might buffer insecurity for front‑line retail staff?

 

 

Suggest 3 causal mechanisms that generate the these empirical phenomenon on job security worries in Hong Kong from the critical realism (notably the real layer)'s perspective.

From a critical realist perspective, the empirical “worry about job security” in Hong Kong retail is generated by underlying causal mechanisms operating in the real domain (structures and powers), which are only partially observed in the empirical survey data. Below are three plausible real‑layer mechanisms that could be driving the patterns you described.


Mechanism 1: Structural precarisation of Hong Kong retail work

Real‑layer structure:
Hong Kong’s retail sector has become structurally precarious due to a combination of macroeconomic volatility, dependence on tourism, high commercial rents and intense competition, leading to cost‑cutting, workforce flexibilisation and frequent restructuring. These structural conditions possess causal powers to make employment objectively unstable, regardless of whether any single worker “feels” insecure on a given day.

How it generates job‑security worry:

·        When retail sales move with tourist flows and local sentiment, firms routinely respond by reducing hours, pushing unpaid leave, and downsizing front‑line staff.

·        Over time, this pattern creates an enduring generative mechanism: workers learn that demand shocks are translated into labour shocks, so they rationally anticipate possible job loss or hour reduction whenever there is bad news.

·        Even if a specific store is not currently retrenching, the structural tendency of the sector toward volatility and precarious contracts continues to “fire” in the background, producing widespread worry as an emergent property of these labour market arrangements.

For business management, this mechanism implies that job insecurity worries are not just “perceptions” to be corrected with communication, but rational responses to a structurally precarious employment regime in retail.


Mechanism 2: Technological and organisational transformation without employee control

Real‑layer structure:
There is an underlying transformation mechanism driven by digitalisation, AI adoption, and new retail formats (omnichannel, self‑checkout, automation), combined with managerial strategies that centralise control over technology decisions. This transformation has the real power to deskill or reshape front‑line roles, and to redistribute power and discretion away from store‑level employees.

How it generates job‑security worry:

·        Surveys in Hong Kong show that many workers expect their skills to become irrelevant in the near term and feel they have limited control over how technology affects their work.

·        In retail, technology is frequently introduced as a cost‑saving or headcount‑reducing initiative (self‑service kiosks, inventory automation, AI scheduling), which signals that some tasks—and potentially roles—will be eliminated or downgraded.

·        Because decisions about technology and restructuring are made centrally, with limited meaningful participation by front‑line staff, employees experience a latent powerlessness; this mechanism operates even when no layoffs are announced yet.

From a critical realist standpoint, the real layer here is the structural coupling of technological change with managerial cost‑reduction logics and low worker voice. The empirical outcome—heightened job‑security worry among retail staff—is one actualisation of this deeper mechanism.


Mechanism 3: Institutionalised weak labour protection and high replaceability

Real‑layer structure:
Hong Kong’s institutional context features relatively light employment protection, limited standard‑working‑hours legislation, and a large pool of relatively low‑skilled or easily substitutable labour in services. This institutional configuration gives employers strong powers to hire and fire, extend hours, or restructure with comparatively few legal or collective constraints.

How it generates job‑security worry:

·        Studies on working conditions and precarious employment in Hong Kong show long working hours, non‑standard contracts, and associations with poorer mental health outcomes.

·        In retail, where many roles are low‑skill and interchangeable, weak formal protection plus high replaceability combine into a mechanism whereby workers internalise that they can be replaced quickly and cheaply.

·        This institutional mechanism continuously shapes expectations, so employees become highly sensitive to small cues (slower footfall, schedule changes, rumours) and interpret them through a lens of “I can be easily let go”. The result is persistent job‑security anxiety, even in periods without active downsizing.

For management theory, this mechanism foregrounds the role of institutional and regulatory structures in generating perceived job insecurity; it suggests that micro‑level HR interventions (wellbeing programmes, internal communications) will be limited if the macro‑institutional powers remain unchanged.


How you might use these in your dissertation

Each mechanism can be turned into a theoretical proposition in a critical‑realist‑informed study:

·        Mechanism 1 as “sectoral precarisation”: link macro retail volatility and cost structure to perceived job insecurity and outcomes like turnover intention or service quality.

·        Mechanism 2 as “technology–power configuration”: examine how perceived lack of control over technology and restructuring mediates the effect of digitalisation on job‑security worry.

·        Mechanism 3 as “institutional vulnerability”: model how perceived replaceability and weak protection (e.g., contract type, union presence, grievance channels) condition the relationship between organisational change and insecurity.

A typical critical realist write‑up would explicitly distinguish:

1.    the empirical (survey responses about worry),

2.    the actual (concrete events like restructuring, reduced hours), and

3.    the real (structural precarisation, tech–power configuration, and institutional vulnerability mechanisms that generate and constrain those events).

To move this forward for your MBA research design, which of these three mechanisms do you feel most drawn to operationalise first—sectoral precarisation, tech‑driven restructuring, or institutional vulnerability—and how might you begin to translate it into specific survey items or interview prompts?

 

Describe four main characteristics of causal mechanisms in critical realism, with some reference to our topic of discussion of “worry about job security” in Hong Kong retail.

Here are four core characteristics of causal mechanisms in critical realism, illustrated with “worry about job security” among Hong Kong retail workers.


1. Mechanisms are real but not directly observable

In critical realism, mechanisms exist in the “real” layer: they are underlying structures and powers that generate events, even if people are not consciously aware of them. They are not the same as the survey answers or interview quotes; those are empirical traces of something deeper.

·        For job‑security worry, the mechanism is not “people say they are worried” but, for example, the structural tendency of Hong Kong retail employers to cut staff or hours when sales dip, because of high rents, thin margins, and flexible labour rules.

·        Even when no layoff is happening today, that structural tendency still exists and can “fire” under certain conditions, producing ongoing anxiety.

So, as a critical realist, you treat worry as an effect; the mechanism is the real employment structure that makes jobs genuinely precarious.


2. Mechanisms are emergent powers of structures and relations

Mechanisms are not just individual psychological reactions; they emerge from how entities are structured and related (e.g., firms, regulations, technologies, labour markets). Change the structure/relations and you change the mechanism’s powers.

Applied to Hong Kong retail:

·        The combination of volatile tourist‑dependent demand, intense rental pressure, and a pool of easily replaceable front‑line labour creates an emergent “precarisation mechanism” that tends to make jobs unstable.

·        Workers’ worries are then an emergent outcome of how these macro‑level conditions, organisational policies (e.g., use of casual contracts), and individual biographies intersect—not just a sum of individual traits like “anxious personality”.

In a dissertation, you would therefore focus on those emergent configurations (e.g., “retail business model + labour regulation + staffing strategy”) rather than only on individual‑level variables.


3. Mechanisms are tendential and context‑dependent, not deterministic

Critical realism insists that mechanisms have tendencies—they make certain outcomes more likely—but do not determine outcomes in a simple one‑to‑one way. Whether a mechanism produces a particular effect depends on the context and on how it interacts with other mechanisms.

For job‑security worry in retail:

·        A “cost‑cutting in downturns” mechanism tends to generate job insecurity, but in a store with strong internal redeployment, transparent communication, and training opportunities, that tendency can be moderated or partially “counter‑acted”.

·        Conversely, the same mechanism in a small shop with no internal career paths and opaque decision‑making will tend to generate much stronger and more widespread anxiety.

This helps explain variation in worry across firms or even across stores within the same chain: the same deep mechanism is operating, but in different local configurations of resources, leadership style, and employment practices.


4. Mechanisms operate over time and can be reproduced or transformed

Mechanisms have a temporal dimension: they produce patterns across time, and human actions can either reproduce them (so they keep operating) or transform them (so their powers change).

In the Hong Kong retail case:

·        Repeated cycles of “slow sales → unpaid leave/layoffs → quick rehiring when demand returns” teach workers that jobs are fragile. Over years, this sedimented experience becomes part of the taken‑for‑granted culture (“retail jobs are never secure here”), reinforcing worry and normalising precarious practices.

·        However, if large retailers change their HR strategy—e.g., committing to fewer layoffs, more cross‑training, and using natural attrition instead of abrupt cuts—the mechanism itself changes: the sector’s structural tendency shifts from “rapid shedding of labour” toward “internal adjustment and redeployment.”

In research terms, your explanation is not just “X causes Y” at one point in time, but “this historically formed mechanism has been reproducing a pattern of job‑security worry, and particular management practices can either reinforce or weaken it.”

 


** This method to discuss with generative AI is useful for developing a student's own discussion for the writing of his/her MBA dissertation report chapter 5 (Discussion of findings); in the context of working on your dissertation chapter 5, you could ask generative AI to suggest some causal mechanisms that "may produce" your dissertation report research findings (re: dissertation report chapter 4).




A collection of blog notes on using chatgpt for research purpose.