“…For instance, research on the aspects that define a good job emphasises the importance of taking into account a large variety of employee-desirable job factors, most of which can be described as related to WFPs, such as hours of work or job security (Barting et al, 2012;Clark, 1998;Jones et al, 2012;Origo and Pagani, 2008;Petrescu and Simmons, 2008). In fact, in a large-scale study in Britain, job security is found to be a key desirable factor, to the extent that, if job security were the same, differences in job satisfaction would be expected to be eliminated between employees on permanent and non-permanent types of contract (Green and Heywood, 2007). Table 4 show that, compared to the number of forty EEA migrants hired by the average British workplace, there are likely to be six more EEA workers in workplaces implementing job security, two more EEA workers if implementing Working from home, three more EEA workers if the workplace provides a nursery as part of its family policies, three more EEA workers if pay is contingent on results, one more EEA workers if Training is provided or Teamwork is used, and nearly one fewer employees if offering relatively low pay.…”