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Is outsourcing better? Clients' views on contracting in domestic cleaning services

David du Toit (Sociology, University of Johannesburg, Johannesburg, South Africa)
Lindy Heinecken (Sociology and Social Anthropology, University of Stellenbosch, Stellenbosch, South Africa)

Employee Relations

ISSN: 0142-5455

Article publication date: 16 February 2021

Issue publication date: 13 July 2021

684

Abstract

Purpose

The nature of paid domestic work is changing, with the growth in companies delivering domestic cleaning services. Few studies have looked at why people opt to use these services and the underlying drivers. As with the outsourcing of non-core tasks in businesses, outsourcing domestic work is motivated by similar, yet different reasons, which have to do with the personal and private nature of domestic employment. This study aims to establish the reasons why “clients”, who were former employers of domestic servants, opted to outsource domestic work to a domestic cleaning service provider.

Design/methodology/approach

Given the limited research on domestic cleaning services in South Africa, a mixed-methods research approach is used.

Findings

The findings showed that there are three key motivations: the nature of the domestic cleaning service supplier, the services rendered by domestic workers and the tripartite employment relationships. These three benefits imply that clients have access to functional and numerical flexibility, unlike employing a domestic worker directly. This study contributes to the literature on outsourcing and domestic work by showing that clients not only look to change the economic structure of the relationship with domestic workers, but it allows them to psychologically and emotionally distance themselves from domestic workers.

Research limitations/implications

This study shows that some people are no longer willing to have a relationship with the people who clean their homes, and that they believe it is simply not worth the effort to maintain a relationship. This is an aspect that needs further research, as this is the one sphere where women are united in their plight, albeit from different worldviews. Thus, a limitation is that this study only focuses on clients' views of outsourcing. Have domestic workers employed by the outsourced domestic cleaning service supplier become just like assembly-line workers, where they are anonymous to their clients, performing routine tasks with little recognition from those whose homes they are servicing? Future studies could focus on domestic workers' views on outsourcing and the effects it has on their working conditions and employment relations.

Originality/value

Firstly, studies mainly focus on the Global North where domestic work and outsourcing have different dynamics, regulation policies and social changes when compared to South Africa. Secondly, few studies have sought to establish why people shift from employing a domestic or care worker directly to an outsourced domestic agency when direct domestic help is available and affordable. Considering these shortcomings, this study aims to provide a better understanding of domestic cleaning service suppliers from the perspective of clients, often omitted from the literature. Accordingly, this study aimed to establish what the benefits are for clients (former employers of domestic workers) who use domestic cleaning service suppliers.

Keywords

Citation

du Toit, D. and Heinecken, L. (2021), "Is outsourcing better? Clients' views on contracting in domestic cleaning services", Employee Relations, Vol. 43 No. 5, pp. 1147-1162. https://doi.org/10.1108/ER-08-2020-0394

Publisher

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Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2021, Emerald Publishing Limited

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