Using original, representative survey data, we document that analytical, routine, and manual job tasks can be measured with high validity, vary substantially within and between occupations, are significantly related to workers’ characteristics, and are robustly predictive of wage differences between occupations and among workers in the same occupation. We offer a conceptual framework that makes explicit the causal links between human capital endowments, occupational assignment, job tasks, and wages, which motivate a Roy model of the allocation of workers to occupations. We offer two simple tests of the model’s gross predictions for the relationship between tasks and wages, both of which receive qualified empirical support.National Science F...
The demand for skills has changed throughout recent decades, favouring high-skilled workers that per...
This dissertation employs the “Task-Approach” to study how tasks impact different facets of the labo...
We develop a new approach to measuring human capital that permits the distinction of both observable...
While a burgeoning literature has extolled the conceptual virtues of directly measuring the underlyi...
We develop and estimate an equilibrium job search model of worker careers, allowing for human capita...
An empirical investigation to the effects of occupational skills, human capital, and other worker ch...
This article studies how portable skills accumulated in the labor market are. Using rich data on tas...
Previous studies assume that labor market skills are either fully general or specific to a firm. Thi...
This paper examines how primitive skills associated with occupations are formed and rewarded in the ...
This article investigates the links between earnings, human capital and job tasks, using internation...
The demand for skills has changed throughout recent decades, favouring high-skilled workers that per...
We develop and estimate an equilibrium job search model of worker careers, allowing for human capita...
This study examines the effects of the relative importance of task type on occupational employment a...
By analyzing occupational task profiles, an occupational change can be split up into two components:...
This paper presents instrumental variables estimates of the effects of firm tenure, occupation speci...
The demand for skills has changed throughout recent decades, favouring high-skilled workers that per...
This dissertation employs the “Task-Approach” to study how tasks impact different facets of the labo...
We develop a new approach to measuring human capital that permits the distinction of both observable...
While a burgeoning literature has extolled the conceptual virtues of directly measuring the underlyi...
We develop and estimate an equilibrium job search model of worker careers, allowing for human capita...
An empirical investigation to the effects of occupational skills, human capital, and other worker ch...
This article studies how portable skills accumulated in the labor market are. Using rich data on tas...
Previous studies assume that labor market skills are either fully general or specific to a firm. Thi...
This paper examines how primitive skills associated with occupations are formed and rewarded in the ...
This article investigates the links between earnings, human capital and job tasks, using internation...
The demand for skills has changed throughout recent decades, favouring high-skilled workers that per...
We develop and estimate an equilibrium job search model of worker careers, allowing for human capita...
This study examines the effects of the relative importance of task type on occupational employment a...
By analyzing occupational task profiles, an occupational change can be split up into two components:...
This paper presents instrumental variables estimates of the effects of firm tenure, occupation speci...
The demand for skills has changed throughout recent decades, favouring high-skilled workers that per...
This dissertation employs the “Task-Approach” to study how tasks impact different facets of the labo...
We develop a new approach to measuring human capital that permits the distinction of both observable...