Craig Holmes - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

About This Presentation
Title:

Craig Holmes

Description:

Polarisation, mobility and segmentation in the labour market Craig Holmes ESRC Centre on Skills, Knowledge and Organisational Performance, University of Oxford – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:107
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 22
Provided by: acuk
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Craig Holmes


1
Polarisation, mobility and segmentation in the
labour market
  • Craig Holmes
  • ESRC Centre on Skills, Knowledge and
    Organisational Performance,
  • University of Oxford

2
Labour market segmentation
  • Labour market segmentation theory developed as a
    departure from traditional models of labour
    supply and demand in the 1960s and 1970s
  • LMS suggests it is possible to identify parts of
    the labour market between which mobility is
    severely or entirely restricted
  • These restrictions are related to factors other
    than individual skills or abilities
  • Dual market primary and secondary sector
    distinguished by wages, security, prospects for
    promotion and training investment
  • Initial employment matters ? workers becoming
    trapped

3
Labour market segmentation
  • The initial literature did not find significant
    empirical support.
  • Mayhew and Roswell (1976) looking at mobility
    between three labour market segments in the UK
    over the past working life of employees in 1972.
  • Segments were defined by occupation and status
    within their jobs.
  • Allocation of each occupation-status pair was
    based on the authors' own judgment, intention of
    creating segments of the lowest possible
    mobility.
  • Mobility matrices derived from this method show
    significant mobility between segments for many
    individuals.

4
Job polarisation in the UK
  • Polarisation hypothesis (Goos and Manning 2007)
  • Price of computer capital has fallen since late
    1970s
  • Computer capital replaces labour engaged in
    routine tasks
  • Non-routine tasks may be complementary to
    computer capital (e.g. management, skilled
    professionals)
  • Result growth in non-routine occupations due to
    changes in demand (complementarities) and supply
    (displaced routine workers)
  • Routine occupations found in middle of income
    distribution
  • Non-routine occupations found at top and bottom
    of distribution
  • Managers, skilled professionals at the top
  • Non-routine service occupations at the bottom
    e.g. hairdressers, cleaners

5
Polarisation and segmentation
  • Obvious overlap between the primary and secondary
    segments and growth occupations
  • Individuals tend to move short distances within
    the labour market in terms of job quality.
    Declining middling occupations reduces options
    for transitory upward steps to better
    occupations.
  • Hence, a hollowed-out labour market could create
    two segments with limited mobility between them.

6
The labour market and segmentation
  • Jobs defined by occupation, industry and skill

Industries
Occupational groups increasing in quality
Levels of skill or expertise within each
industry-occupation
7
The labour market and segmentation
  • Example 1 craft union model or occupational
    labour markets

Industries
Primary segment
Occupational groups
Secondary segment
8
The labour market and segmentation
  • Example 2 internal labour markets

Industries
Primary segment
Occupational groups
Secondary segment
9
The labour market and segmentation
  • Example 3 polarisation

Industries
Primary segment
Occupational groups
Middling occupations
Secondary segment
10
The labour market and segmentation
  • A hollowed-out labour market has
  • Fewer middle jobs for low wage workers to move
    into
  • Increasing competition for those that remain.
  • Significant upward mobility may either be slower,
    or require much more difficult and sizeable
    leaps.
  • Before embarking on a study of mobility using
    longitudinal analysis, it is important to
    understand the ways the polarisation phenomena
    has or has not manifested within a dataset that
    can be used for analysing working life mobility

11
Job polarisation in the UK an assessment
  • Holmes, (2010), SKOPE research paper No. 90
  • Looks at single cohort from National Child
    Development Study between 1981 (aged 23) and 2004
    (aged 46).
  • Replicates the Goos and Manning methodology for
    our NCDS dataset
  • Finds growth in high wage and low wage
    occupations, decline in mid-range occupations,
    proxied by 1981 wage
  • Evidence of routinisation driven employment
    changes

12
Job polarisation in the UK an assessment
  • However, wage distributions exhibit little
    evidence of polarisation
  • Most jobs still fall in the middle of wage
    distribution
  • How can these two observations be reconciled?
  • Existing evidence relies on a strong assumption
    that wage structures have remained constant over
    the past three decades
  • Changing wage structures, due to the associated
    changes in supply and demand of different
    workers, may have led to a new type of middling
    occupation

13
Job polarisation in the UK an assessment
  • Change in employment share of wage deciles.
  • Initially highest and lowest paid occupations
    grew more than the middle earning occupations

14
Job polarisation in the UK an assessment
  • Resulting wage distributions are important
  • Absent of other effects, a polarising labour
    force should be observed as in the diagram below

15
Job polarisation in the UK an assessment
  • Changing distributions from NCDS cohort (hourly
    and weekly, full-time workers)

16
Job polarisation in the UK an assessment
  • Econometric methods for analysing changes
    accurately
  • Descriptive method (see Holmes, 2010) change in
    employment at each (log) wage percentile
  • Polarisation illustrative example

17
Job polarisation in the UK an assessment
18
Further research
  • This suggests polarisation may not be as
    clear-cut a mechanism for creating labour market
    segmentation
  • However, still suggests several issues for
    further mobility analysis
  • Destinations of displaced routine occupation
    workers
  • Are they able to move upwards?
  • Difference between occupational and wage mobility
  • Experience of new entrants compared to existing
    workers
  • Are new entrants more polarised?
  • Do they experience different patterns of
    occupational and wage mobility
  • Role of skills in both cases

19
Further research
  • Destination of displaced routine workers
  • Model four occupational categories
    (professional, managerial, routine and service)
  • Separate out transitions from routine occupations
    caused by routinisation from those caused by
    career advancement
  • Similarly for transitions between routine and
    service occupations
  • Empirical strategy
  • Define four occupational categories (SOC, SEG)
  • Calculate transition probabilities in NCDS (1981
    2004)
  • Apply to larger sample of 23 year olds in 1981
    (e.g. LFS) and compare to a counterfactual
    occupational structure (e.g. 46 year olds in LFS
    1981)

20
Further research
  • Destination of displaced routine workers
  • Initial results
  • Probability of transition to professional depends
    on having a degree, rather than starting
    occupation
  • Need to breakdown upward movers by upskilled and
    non-upskilled

Initial structure, 1981, 23 year olds Pre-routinised structure, 46 year olds Post-routinised structure, 46 years olds
Professional 8.4 9.5 13.2
Managerial 10.1 12.6 25.6
Routine 69.3 66.6 41.1
Service 12.2 11.3 20.1
21
Further research
  • Different experiences of later cohorts
  • Autor and Dorn (2009) declining occupations are
    getting older
  • Continue using cohort approach - make use of
    later cohort study (1970 British Cohort Study)
    for comparison
  • Differences at entry more polarised as older
    workers hold on to positions in declining
    occupations. New entrants driving cross sectional
    polarisation?
  • Different mobility opportunities compared to NCDS
    cohort?
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com