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Changes in the Structure and Quality of Jobs in the United States: Effects by Race and Gender, 1973–1990
165
Citations
31
References
1995
Year
Labor Market ParticipationEducationHuman Resource ManagementUnited StatesGender StudiesHighest-quality ContoursLowest-quality ContoursSocial InequalityEmploymentLabor Force TrendLabor Market OutcomeLabor MarketLabor EconomicsChanging WorkforceJob ContourWorkforce DevelopmentSociologyBusinessLabor Market Impact
Using 17 measures of job quality from the 1980 Census, the Current Population Survey, and the Dictionary of Occupational Titles, the authors perform a cluster analysis that groups 621 jobs covering 94% of the work force into six job categories (termed “contours”), a job classification closely resembling those suggested by labor market segmentation theory. The distribution of employment over the period 1973–90 shifted sharply away from the two middle-quality contours toward the two highest-quality contours. The two lowest-quality contours show no decline in employment share in the 1980s. The declining relative position of employed black and Hispanic men stems from both a worsening job mix relative to white men and a sharp drop in the quality of low-skill jobs. Female workers experienced both a greater shift away from jobs in the lower-quality contours and higher real earnings growth within each job contour than male workers.
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