This paper examines labour market behaviour of the highly skilled in high-tech local economies, taking the UK examples of Oxfordshire and Cambridgeshire as case studies. It reports on data from a survey of members of three scientific institutes to compare rates of employee mobility in the two locations and considers the likely explanations and implications of those patterns
With the aid of a geographical information system, our paper constructs a three stage least squares ...
This paper shows that high-tech employment - broadly defined as all workers in high-tech sectors but...
This thesis consists of three substantial chapters on topics related to occupational and industrial ...
Oxfordshire and Cambridgeshire are two of the most high tech economies in the UK (see for example DT...
In this paper we employ data on 156,000 workers working within the Finnish high-tech industries in o...
Universities as a supplier of the highly skilled have long been understood as a contributor to econ...
This paper investigates the impact of technological change on local labour market outcomes in Britai...
International audienceWhile quality of the labour force in a locality is the single most important c...
New university graduates are highly geographically mobile, but, as the literature has shown, often s...
The clustering of innovative industry both demands and creates a highly skilled local labour market....
In this paper we explore for the first time regional differences in the patterning of occupational s...
Better-educated workers form many more long-distance job matches, and they move more quickly followi...
In this paper we employ data on 156,000 workers working within the Finnish high-tech industries in o...
The UK has suffered from persistent spatial differences in unemployment rates for many decades. A lo...
The skill gap in geographical mobility is entirely driven by workers who report moving for a new job...
With the aid of a geographical information system, our paper constructs a three stage least squares ...
This paper shows that high-tech employment - broadly defined as all workers in high-tech sectors but...
This thesis consists of three substantial chapters on topics related to occupational and industrial ...
Oxfordshire and Cambridgeshire are two of the most high tech economies in the UK (see for example DT...
In this paper we employ data on 156,000 workers working within the Finnish high-tech industries in o...
Universities as a supplier of the highly skilled have long been understood as a contributor to econ...
This paper investigates the impact of technological change on local labour market outcomes in Britai...
International audienceWhile quality of the labour force in a locality is the single most important c...
New university graduates are highly geographically mobile, but, as the literature has shown, often s...
The clustering of innovative industry both demands and creates a highly skilled local labour market....
In this paper we explore for the first time regional differences in the patterning of occupational s...
Better-educated workers form many more long-distance job matches, and they move more quickly followi...
In this paper we employ data on 156,000 workers working within the Finnish high-tech industries in o...
The UK has suffered from persistent spatial differences in unemployment rates for many decades. A lo...
The skill gap in geographical mobility is entirely driven by workers who report moving for a new job...
With the aid of a geographical information system, our paper constructs a three stage least squares ...
This paper shows that high-tech employment - broadly defined as all workers in high-tech sectors but...
This thesis consists of three substantial chapters on topics related to occupational and industrial ...