Title: Chutes and Ladders:
1Chutes and Ladders
- Navigating the Low Wage
- Labor Market
-
- Katherine S. Newman
- Princeton University
2Motivations for the No Shame project
- Deficiencies of underclass theory
- Political impact of equating poverty with
unemployment
3 The View from 1996
- Welfare reform floods the low wage labor market
- Skill-biased technological change dampens
prospects - De-industrialization removes well-paid jobs
- Immigration increases competition
4No Shame Evidence for Bleak Outlook
- Saturated labor market
- Teen workers locked out
- Wage differentials between suburbs and city
- Racial preferences of employers
5Dual Labor Market Theory of the 1970s (Averitt,
Horan, Beck, Doeringer/Piore)
- Discontinuous labor markets primary vs.
secondary - Characteristics of secondary market
- Low wages
- No training, no employer investment
- No job ladders
- High turnover
- Workers trapped
6Demography of the Dual Labor Market
- Demographic match
- Minorities
- Youth
- Women
- Low Educated workers
7Stigmatized careers
-
- Causal directions unclear
- Lack of commitment ? job hopping ? stigma ?trap
- Low wages ? job hopping ? stigma ? trap
8Dual Labor Market Theory Reborn
- African Americans (Hudson, Waddoups, Kaufman)
- Immigrants, Enclaves, Ethnic Competition (Tejo,
Portes, Waldinger) - Gender and Queues (Lorence, Ferdousi, Reskin)
- Youth (DeFreitas, Marsden)
-
- Concurrence on limited mobility (Gottfires and
McCormick, Wial, Lichter et al)
9Another View of the Low Wage World
- more skill than generally assumed
- more commitment
- value of being employed
- stigma of holding service job
- Virtuous Association (a la Sutherland)
- Employer investments
10Newmans Gloom
- Under high unemployment, workers cannot
- capitalize on their virtues.
- Too many people higher up clogging the queue.
- Flooded markets undercut worker mobility.
111997 Realities
121997 Realities
13Wage Change Among the Employed1993-97
14Wage Trajectories 1993-2002
20.00
18.00
16.00
14.00
12.00
Constant 2002
10.00
8.00
6.00
4.00
2.00
-
1993
1997
1998
2002
less educ, scs
less educ, skld or unskld
more educ, pscs
15Questions for follow up
- 1. Representativeness?
- 2. Generalizability?
- 3. High Flyers vs. Low Riders
16Wage Trajectories of Workers in Poor Households
17Data
- Survey of Income and Program Participation (SIPP)
- Large nationally-representative longitudinal data
sets - Panels last 24 to 48 months
- 1986-1996 Panels
- October 1985 February 2000
18Methodology
- Create four SIPP samples
- Qualifying Criteria for Every Sample
- 18-40 years old
- Family income lt1.5 x poverty cutoff
- Job pays hourly rate
- Non-managerial job
- 1993 or later
19SIPP Samples from Poor andNear Poor Households
20Distribution of Annual Wage Growth
21Pathways to individual mobility
- Unionized jobs at low skill and high pay
- Private sector Adam, Pedro
- Public sector Kyesha
- Internal mobility in high growth firm
- Latoya
- Human capital increase leads to higher wage job
- Laura (welfare funded)
- David (family funded)
-
22Household mobility
- Worker remains in low wage job, but
- o Marries
- o Long term cohabitation
- o Children enter labor market
- Worker exits market, but finds stable, high wage
partner. - o Ana
23Context matters
- Extremely tight labor markets unprecedented
growth - Union jobs still available
- Welfare policy permitted schooling to meet work
requirement
24Context can change
- Labor markets lax
- Unions busted or closed
- Welfare policy puts work first
25Concluding Thoughts
- --Dead ends ? stepping stones ?dead ends
- --Semi-permeable membranes
- --Policies that matter
- college for welfare
- public tuition
- open unions
- summer youth programs
- EITC