Technological change and labour market institutions and their effect on employment, wages, and inequality

<p>Technological change and labour market institutions (LMI) exert a major influence on the labour markets of developed economies. Routine-biased technological change (RBTC) has been linked to employment polarisation in numerous countries, while institutions such as unions and employment prote...

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Main Author: Haslberger, M
Other Authors: Bukodi, E
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2021
Subjects:
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author Haslberger, M
author2 Bukodi, E
author_facet Bukodi, E
Haslberger, M
author_sort Haslberger, M
collection OXFORD
description <p>Technological change and labour market institutions (LMI) exert a major influence on the labour markets of developed economies. Routine-biased technological change (RBTC) has been linked to employment polarisation in numerous countries, while institutions such as unions and employment protections have been found to reduce inequalities between workers. However, much is still unknown about the labour market impact of technological change across countries and the interplay between technology and institutions. In this thesis, I integrate insights from labour economics and sociology to address some of the gaps in this literature. I investigate three closely linked research questions: how is routine intensity best measured and how does it vary between countries and over time? Under which conditions does RBTC lead to employment polarisation? And do robotisation and LMI contribute to the patterns that enable polarisation? Using data from the European Working Conditions Survey, the Luxembourg Income Study, and the International Federation of Robotics, I pursue these questions in a sample of OECD countries during the period from 1993 until 2016. First, I develop improved indices of occupational task content which show meaningful differences with established measures as well as across countries and over time. Secondly, I demonstrate that RBTC is associated with employment polarisation only in countries where routine occupations are concentrated in the middle of the wage hierarchy. Finally, my analyses suggest that robotisation has reduced the relative wages of routine manufacturing occupations and thus made employment polarisation less likely, particularly in countries with strong employment protections for temporary workers. The findings of this thesis advance the study of employment and wage changes in both economics and sociology, and illustrate the benefits of jointly analysing technological and institutional explanations for differences and changes in employment, wages, and inequality.</p>
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spelling oxford-uuid:19bd0639-19d1-4c12-a824-c69482196d372024-12-01T15:41:44ZTechnological change and labour market institutions and their effect on employment, wages, and inequalityThesishttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_db06uuid:19bd0639-19d1-4c12-a824-c69482196d37Economics--Sociological aspectsLabor marketEnglishHyrax Deposit2021Haslberger, MBukodi, ENolan, B<p>Technological change and labour market institutions (LMI) exert a major influence on the labour markets of developed economies. Routine-biased technological change (RBTC) has been linked to employment polarisation in numerous countries, while institutions such as unions and employment protections have been found to reduce inequalities between workers. However, much is still unknown about the labour market impact of technological change across countries and the interplay between technology and institutions. In this thesis, I integrate insights from labour economics and sociology to address some of the gaps in this literature. I investigate three closely linked research questions: how is routine intensity best measured and how does it vary between countries and over time? Under which conditions does RBTC lead to employment polarisation? And do robotisation and LMI contribute to the patterns that enable polarisation? Using data from the European Working Conditions Survey, the Luxembourg Income Study, and the International Federation of Robotics, I pursue these questions in a sample of OECD countries during the period from 1993 until 2016. First, I develop improved indices of occupational task content which show meaningful differences with established measures as well as across countries and over time. Secondly, I demonstrate that RBTC is associated with employment polarisation only in countries where routine occupations are concentrated in the middle of the wage hierarchy. Finally, my analyses suggest that robotisation has reduced the relative wages of routine manufacturing occupations and thus made employment polarisation less likely, particularly in countries with strong employment protections for temporary workers. The findings of this thesis advance the study of employment and wage changes in both economics and sociology, and illustrate the benefits of jointly analysing technological and institutional explanations for differences and changes in employment, wages, and inequality.</p>
spellingShingle Economics--Sociological aspects
Labor market
Haslberger, M
Technological change and labour market institutions and their effect on employment, wages, and inequality
title Technological change and labour market institutions and their effect on employment, wages, and inequality
title_full Technological change and labour market institutions and their effect on employment, wages, and inequality
title_fullStr Technological change and labour market institutions and their effect on employment, wages, and inequality
title_full_unstemmed Technological change and labour market institutions and their effect on employment, wages, and inequality
title_short Technological change and labour market institutions and their effect on employment, wages, and inequality
title_sort technological change and labour market institutions and their effect on employment wages and inequality
topic Economics--Sociological aspects
Labor market
work_keys_str_mv AT haslbergerm technologicalchangeandlabourmarketinstitutionsandtheireffectonemploymentwagesandinequality