“…Further, the issue of overemployment has recently gained renewed attention in Germany’s legislation : Thus, the right to permanent part-time work (TzBfG/ Act on Part-Time Work and Fixed-Term Employment Contracts), which was introduced in 2001 to combat overemployment, was supplemented in 2019 by the right to a temporary reduction of contractual working hours (§9a TzBfG). In research , a large body of work has focused on the negative link between overemployment and health (Bartoll and Ramos, 2020; Bell et al, 2012; De Moortel et al, 2018; Kim et al, 2021; Kuroda and Yamamoto, 2019; Lepinteur, 2019; Miranti and Li, 2020; Otterbach et al, 2021), satisfaction with health (Bell et al, 2012; Matiaske et al, 2017), life satisfaction (Angrave and Charlwood, 2015; Başlevent and Kirmanoğlu, 2014; Bell and Blanchflower, 2019) and job satisfaction (Angrave and Charlwood, 2015; Fabian and Breunig, 2019; Frei and Grund, 2022; Grund and Tilkes, 2023; Kuroda and Yamamoto, 2019; Lee et al, 2015; Pagan, 2017). Others have focused on various job-related outcomes of overemployment or work hour (in)congruence, such as commitment (Abrahamsen, 2010; Odle-Dusseau et al, 2012), turnover (intention) (Boheim and Taylor, 2004; Odle-Dusseau et al, 2012; Sturman and Walsh, 2014), retirement (intention) (Silver et al, 2019; Wöhrmann et al, 2020) or work-life conflict/balance (Brauner et al, 2020; Odle-Dusseau et al, 2012; Skinner and Pocock, 2008; Sturman and Walsh, 2014) – and have found mixed results.…”