Routine Workers in an Increasingly Automated World of Work: Evidence from Switzerland

This paper explores the distributional consequences of technological change on midskilled routine workers in Switzerland in three steps: (1) The first part studies aggregate trends in the labor market and confirms the pattern of an eroding middle: The disadvantages of technological progress are conc...

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Main Author: Thomas Kurer
Format: Article
Language:deu
Published: University of Fribourg - Division of Sociology, Social Work and Social Policy 2019-05-01
Series:sozialpolitik.ch
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.sozialpolitik.ch/article/view/3707
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author Thomas Kurer
author_facet Thomas Kurer
author_sort Thomas Kurer
collection DOAJ
description This paper explores the distributional consequences of technological change on midskilled routine workers in Switzerland in three steps: (1) The first part studies aggregate trends in the labor market and confirms the pattern of an eroding middle: The disadvantages of technological progress are concentrated on routine workers whose share in the labor force has drastically declined over time. (2) In order to better understand the economic conditions associated with this overall pattern, the second part draws on individual-level panel data to study actual employment transitions. The analysis shows that transitions are less frequent than the aggregate pattern might suggest: Only a minority of routine workers actually switches to other jobs while the largest chunk of the decline is explained by ‘natural transitions’ into retirement. (3) The last part of the paper builds on original survey data to examine routine workers’ subjective assessment of their chances in a changing world of work and demonstrates a surprisingly high degree of consciousness about susceptibility to automation. To conclude, I discuss some societal implications of the ‘hollowing of the middle’.
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spelling doaj.art-e8409a3e025448feac812b42997fad682023-09-03T11:13:08ZdeuUniversity of Fribourg - Division of Sociology, Social Work and Social Policysozialpolitik.ch2297-82242019-05-011/201910.18753/2297-8224-130Routine Workers in an Increasingly Automated World of Work: Evidence from SwitzerlandThomas Kurer0Harvard UniversityThis paper explores the distributional consequences of technological change on midskilled routine workers in Switzerland in three steps: (1) The first part studies aggregate trends in the labor market and confirms the pattern of an eroding middle: The disadvantages of technological progress are concentrated on routine workers whose share in the labor force has drastically declined over time. (2) In order to better understand the economic conditions associated with this overall pattern, the second part draws on individual-level panel data to study actual employment transitions. The analysis shows that transitions are less frequent than the aggregate pattern might suggest: Only a minority of routine workers actually switches to other jobs while the largest chunk of the decline is explained by ‘natural transitions’ into retirement. (3) The last part of the paper builds on original survey data to examine routine workers’ subjective assessment of their chances in a changing world of work and demonstrates a surprisingly high degree of consciousness about susceptibility to automation. To conclude, I discuss some societal implications of the ‘hollowing of the middle’.https://www.sozialpolitik.ch/article/view/3707Employment PolarizationAutomationTechnological ChangeRoutine WorkHollowing of the MiddlePanel Data
spellingShingle Thomas Kurer
Routine Workers in an Increasingly Automated World of Work: Evidence from Switzerland
sozialpolitik.ch
Employment Polarization
Automation
Technological Change
Routine Work
Hollowing of the Middle
Panel Data
title Routine Workers in an Increasingly Automated World of Work: Evidence from Switzerland
title_full Routine Workers in an Increasingly Automated World of Work: Evidence from Switzerland
title_fullStr Routine Workers in an Increasingly Automated World of Work: Evidence from Switzerland
title_full_unstemmed Routine Workers in an Increasingly Automated World of Work: Evidence from Switzerland
title_short Routine Workers in an Increasingly Automated World of Work: Evidence from Switzerland
title_sort routine workers in an increasingly automated world of work evidence from switzerland
topic Employment Polarization
Automation
Technological Change
Routine Work
Hollowing of the Middle
Panel Data
url https://www.sozialpolitik.ch/article/view/3707
work_keys_str_mv AT thomaskurer routineworkersinanincreasinglyautomatedworldofworkevidencefromswitzerland