Job polarisation in the UK: an assessment using longitudinal data

This paper provides an assessment of Goos and Manning's (2007) polarised or 'hour-glass' labout market thesis, which they claim has been caused by a period of routinisation where labout engaged in routine task occupations has been replaced by computer capital. It uses data taken from...

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Autor Principal: Holmes, C
Formato: Working paper
Idioma:English
Publicado: ESRC Centre on Skills, Knowledge and Organisational Performance (SKOPE) 2010
Subjects:
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author Holmes, C
author_facet Holmes, C
author_sort Holmes, C
collection OXFORD
description This paper provides an assessment of Goos and Manning's (2007) polarised or 'hour-glass' labout market thesis, which they claim has been caused by a period of routinisation where labout engaged in routine task occupations has been replaced by computer capital. It uses data taken from two waves of the National Child Development Study (NCDS) to study changes in labout market outcomes between 1981 and 2004 for a single cohort. While this dataset does demonstrate changes in employment consistent with routinisation, it is not clear that a polarising labour market is the inevitable conclusion. Looking at wage distributions for this cohort shows that the largest number of jobs continue to be in the middle of the wage spectrum. This paper questions the implicit assumption made by Goos and Manning (and subsequent authors) that initial wages provide a consistent proxy for job quality over the time period, and argues that the wage structure of occupations may have altered significantly over time.
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spelling oxford-uuid:7d6a0d4e-aabe-4871-8078-53ebb0c6ffe72022-03-26T21:03:31ZJob polarisation in the UK: an assessment using longitudinal dataWorking paperhttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_8042uuid:7d6a0d4e-aabe-4871-8078-53ebb0c6ffe7EmploymentEducationEnglishOxford University Research Archive - ValetESRC Centre on Skills, Knowledge and Organisational Performance (SKOPE)2010Holmes, CThis paper provides an assessment of Goos and Manning's (2007) polarised or 'hour-glass' labout market thesis, which they claim has been caused by a period of routinisation where labout engaged in routine task occupations has been replaced by computer capital. It uses data taken from two waves of the National Child Development Study (NCDS) to study changes in labout market outcomes between 1981 and 2004 for a single cohort. While this dataset does demonstrate changes in employment consistent with routinisation, it is not clear that a polarising labour market is the inevitable conclusion. Looking at wage distributions for this cohort shows that the largest number of jobs continue to be in the middle of the wage spectrum. This paper questions the implicit assumption made by Goos and Manning (and subsequent authors) that initial wages provide a consistent proxy for job quality over the time period, and argues that the wage structure of occupations may have altered significantly over time.
spellingShingle Employment
Education
Holmes, C
Job polarisation in the UK: an assessment using longitudinal data
title Job polarisation in the UK: an assessment using longitudinal data
title_full Job polarisation in the UK: an assessment using longitudinal data
title_fullStr Job polarisation in the UK: an assessment using longitudinal data
title_full_unstemmed Job polarisation in the UK: an assessment using longitudinal data
title_short Job polarisation in the UK: an assessment using longitudinal data
title_sort job polarisation in the uk an assessment using longitudinal data
topic Employment
Education
work_keys_str_mv AT holmesc jobpolarisationintheukanassessmentusinglongitudinaldata