This paper analyzes the pattern of occupational change in four Western European countries over the last two decades: what kind of jobs have been expanding -- high-paid jobs, low-paid jobs or both? By addressing this issue, we also examine what theoretical account is consistent with the observed pattern of change: skill-biased technical change, skill supply evolution or wage-setting institutions? Our empirical findings show a picture of massive occupational upgrading that closely matches educational expansion. In all four countries, by far the strongest employment growth occurred at the top of the occupational hierarchy, among managers and professionals. Yet in parallel, in Britain and Switzerland, as well as in Germany and Spain after 1996 ...
In this paper, we describe the change in social structure of 15 european countries over the past 20 ...
In this paper, we describe the change in social structure of 15 european countries over the past 20 ...
Building on studies on the impact of the Great Recession on the occupational and skill structure of ...
This paper analyzes the pattern of occupational change in four Western European countries over the l...
We analyze the pattern of occupational change over the last two decades in Britain, Germany, Spain a...
The routinisation thesis expects technology to hollow out the middle of the employment structure, le...
Job polarisation instead of pure upgrading emerges in European industries. In this article, changes ...
Job polarization instead of pure upgrading is emerging in European industries. This article focuses ...
What types of jobs are becoming more important in our economies, and what causes these changes? This...
In recent years, a number of academic papers have argued that over the last couple of decades, techn...
Building on the canonical model of skill-biased technical change to incorporate differential effects...
The routinisation thesis expects technology to hollow out the middle of the employment structure, le...
The consensus view in economics is that labor markets are polarizing as job creation takes place in ...
This paper shows the employment structure of 16 European countries has been polarizing in recent yea...
This paper shows that recent changes in the employment structure of 16 European countries have been ...
In this paper, we describe the change in social structure of 15 european countries over the past 20 ...
In this paper, we describe the change in social structure of 15 european countries over the past 20 ...
Building on studies on the impact of the Great Recession on the occupational and skill structure of ...
This paper analyzes the pattern of occupational change in four Western European countries over the l...
We analyze the pattern of occupational change over the last two decades in Britain, Germany, Spain a...
The routinisation thesis expects technology to hollow out the middle of the employment structure, le...
Job polarisation instead of pure upgrading emerges in European industries. In this article, changes ...
Job polarization instead of pure upgrading is emerging in European industries. This article focuses ...
What types of jobs are becoming more important in our economies, and what causes these changes? This...
In recent years, a number of academic papers have argued that over the last couple of decades, techn...
Building on the canonical model of skill-biased technical change to incorporate differential effects...
The routinisation thesis expects technology to hollow out the middle of the employment structure, le...
The consensus view in economics is that labor markets are polarizing as job creation takes place in ...
This paper shows the employment structure of 16 European countries has been polarizing in recent yea...
This paper shows that recent changes in the employment structure of 16 European countries have been ...
In this paper, we describe the change in social structure of 15 european countries over the past 20 ...
In this paper, we describe the change in social structure of 15 european countries over the past 20 ...
Building on studies on the impact of the Great Recession on the occupational and skill structure of ...