• Refine Query
  • Source
  • Publication year
  • to
  • Language
  • 2
  • 1
  • Tagged with
  • 5
  • 5
  • 2
  • 2
  • 2
  • 2
  • 2
  • 2
  • 2
  • 2
  • 2
  • 2
  • 2
  • 2
  • 2
  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

Occupational structure and growing wage inequality in the U.S., 1983 - 2002

Kim, Changhwan 27 April 2015 (has links)
Since the 1980's, wage inequality in the U.S. has been dramatically increasing. I investigate the impact of occupational structure, measured at the three-digit level, on this trend of growing wage inequality. The investigation is conducted in terms of three major research tasks. First, I test the validity of the 'disaggregate structuration' view in relation to growing wage inequality. The 'disaggregate structuration' view is suggested as an alternative to big class theories. Theorists of the 'disaggregate structuration' view assert that an occupation is a gemeinschaftlich community characterized by internal homogeneity. Thus, this view implies that most of the rise in inequality occurs between occupations and that within-occupational inequality is actually decreasing, due to the progress of 'occupationalization.' My analyses, however, find that the majority of the growth in inequality has occurred within occupations. Secondly, I thus seek a more delineated explanation for the causes of rising within-occupational inequality. I investigate whether previously proposed hypotheses can account for this phenomenon. Hypotheses that I test include demographic change, deindustrialization, unions, insecure employment relations, increases in the return to skill, and changes of firm organizations. Although smaller than within-occupational inequality, between-occupational inequality has also been growing during this period. Thirdly, I therefore investigate the changes of between-occupational inequality. Since between- occupational inequality is a weighted sum of occupational mean wages, I examine whether the same hypotheses tested for within-occupational inequality can explain the changes in occupational mean wages over time. Using the Current Population Survey (CPS) from 1983 to 2002, I find that as within-occupational inequality has grown faster than between-occupational inequality, the direct association between occupational structure and wage inequality has declined over this period. While the importance of general skills (i.e., education) in determining workers' wages is growing, the importance of occupation-specific skills is declining. For regression models of hourly wages, the amount of R-squared increase by adding three-digit occupational codes (331 occupational dummies) in addition to general skills (5 dummies of education) has decreased for this period. Therefore, the strong version of 'aggregate structuration' and 'occupationalization' is not supported. I would like to note, however, that the R-squared of hourly wage increases jumped significantly when we use three-digit occupational codes instead of one-digit occupational codes even after adjusting for the degrees of freedom. Thus, the weak version of structuration is not rejected. For multivariate tests, inequality indexes and other variables by detailed occupation are extracted from each year's CPS and merged into one panel data file with occupation as a unit of analysis. Multi-level growth models are then estimated using detailed occupational categories as the unit of analysis in order to assess how the structural characteristics of occupations affect changes in mean wages and wage inequality over this time period. Contrary to the expectations of the skill-biased technological change hypothesis, changes in the distribution of education do not affect the growth of wage inequality within occupations. In contrast to the traditional view of unions as promoting wage equality, within-occupational inequality is increased by unionization. The increase of female labor market participation seems to pull down inequality in an occupation. Deindustrialization does not account for the rise of intra-occupational inequality, while insecure employment relations do. As expected by the organizational change view, inequality grows faster in high skill jobs and service jobs. Regarding between-occupational inequality, traditional explanations do better jobs in accounting for its change than for within-occupational inequality. Skill biased technological changes and unions have positive effects on occupational mean wages. Multi-level growth models provide additional evidence against disaggregate structuration. The disaggregate structuration view assumes that occupational common interests will be achieved as accomplishment of active occupational associations. Thus, the changes of occupational mean wage, which is a clearly common interest of members in an occupation, should be explained by occupation itself, not by other demographic and institutional variables. Contrary to this expectation, most of the within-occupational variation are not explained well by other demographic and institutional variables, including race, gender, and unions. In conclusion, although sociologists often view occupation as the back-bone of the stratification system, the rise in within-occupational inequality suggests that broader, more complex approaches may be needed in order to better explain the increasing disparity in wages. I suggest that more attention should be given to firm level studies in which changes inside and between firms are investigated. / text
2

An Analysis of the Effect of Urban Concentration and Occupational Structure on Wage Differentials between Women and Men in Selected Geographic Divisions of the United States

Hession-Eaton, Susan Stickler 01 August 1973 (has links)
When attempting to explain the economics of occupational structure, income servies as the apex of discrimination. Women earn only 60% of what men earn. This statistic does not offend enough people since efforts to change the situation have provided only further resistance by women and men for improvement in the earnings split. Women tend to receive lower wage and salary earnings than men because of differences in types of jobs held, job training and continuity of work experience. Large numbers of women work in traditionally low-paying occupations and low-wage industries. Women tend to respond to their cultural up-bringing. My hypothesis rests on the foundation that women feel compelled to move into low-income areas. I utilized occupational and georaphic categories in order to provide a more selected example of wage discrimination.
3

The male occupational structure of England and Wales, 1600-1850

Keibek, Sebastiaan Antonius Johannes January 2017 (has links)
This dissertation builds on existing work by members of the ‘Occupational Structure of Britain 1379-1911’ project, led by Leigh Shaw-Taylor and E.A. Wrigley. It addresses three central problems of the project, namely (a) the lack of geographical and temporal coverage by the project’s existing data sources before the nineteenth century, (b) the allocation of the numerous men with the indistinct denominator of ‘labourer’ to occupational sectors, and (c) the correction of occupational structures derived from single-occupation denominators for the (presumed) ubiquity of dual employments in the early-modern world. The solutions to these problems result in a set of estimates for the male occupational structure of England and Wales between 1600 and 1850, in twenty-year time intervals, at the level of sectors (primary, secondary, tertiary) and sub-sectors (farmers, miners, textile workers, transport workers, etcetera), at national, regional, and local geographical scales. These estimates raise important questions regarding the validity of conclusions drawn in the highly influential national accounts literature. Firstly, they place the structural shift from agriculture to industry firmly in the seventeenth and, to a lesser degree, even the sixteenth century, well before the Industrial Revolution. This, in turn, means that productivity growth in the secondary sector during the Industrial Revolution must have been much higher than previously thought, and thereby also the effects of technological and organisational innovation. Secondly, it provides strong evidence that although economic developments during the eighteenth and early-nineteenth century may seem to have been limited and gradual at the national scale, this surface calm hides diverging regional developments which were anything but limited and gradual, held together by a persistently growing transport sector. The result was a regionally specialised yet integrated economy, firmly in place at the eve of the Industrial Revolution which – in light of the known role of small, specialised regions as incubators of technological innovation and novel forms of economic organisation in present-day economies – may well have contributed to Britain’s precocious transition to modern economic growth.
4

Estrutura ocupacional e pobreza na região metropolitana de São Paulo, 1991-2010 / Occupational structure and poverty in the metropolitan area of São Paulo, 1991-2010

Andrade, Ian Prates Cordeiro 09 September 2013 (has links)
No Brasil, o fenômeno da pobreza foi interpretado, mais das vezes, a partir da sua relação com o mercado de trabalho, com a escassez da proteção social e com o processo de expansão do assalariamento. Por outro lado, os estudos sobre estrutura ocupacional raras vezes adotam a pobreza como fenômeno a ser analisado, relegando-a a um mero subproduto das dinâmicas da estratificação social. Esta pesquisa pretende mostrar como podemos incorporar a estrutura ocupacional, a partir da sua relação com as mudanças econômicas e a proteção social, à análise da pobreza. Utilizamos como estudo de caso a Região Metropolitana de São Paulo, observada no período compreendido entre os anos de 1991 e 2010, quando analisamos, à luz de dados censitários, como diferentes padrões da estrutura ocupacional nessas duas décadas condicionaram a dinâmica da pobreza. / In Brazil, poverty has been interpreted, in most cases, from its relations with the labor market, the tight scope of social protection and the process of the expansion of the paid labor force. In the other hand, the studies about occupational structure dont use to embrace poverty as a phenomenon to be analyzed. Usually, poverty is seemed as a residue of the social stratification dynamics. This research aims to show how we can incorporate the occupational structure and its relationship with the economic changes and social protection, to analyze poverty. We use the Metropolitan Area of São Paulo between the years of 1991 and 2010 as a case study; based on census data we analyze how different patterns of occupational structure in these two decades constrained the dynamics of poverty.
5

Estrutura ocupacional e pobreza na região metropolitana de São Paulo, 1991-2010 / Occupational structure and poverty in the metropolitan area of São Paulo, 1991-2010

Ian Prates Cordeiro Andrade 09 September 2013 (has links)
No Brasil, o fenômeno da pobreza foi interpretado, mais das vezes, a partir da sua relação com o mercado de trabalho, com a escassez da proteção social e com o processo de expansão do assalariamento. Por outro lado, os estudos sobre estrutura ocupacional raras vezes adotam a pobreza como fenômeno a ser analisado, relegando-a a um mero subproduto das dinâmicas da estratificação social. Esta pesquisa pretende mostrar como podemos incorporar a estrutura ocupacional, a partir da sua relação com as mudanças econômicas e a proteção social, à análise da pobreza. Utilizamos como estudo de caso a Região Metropolitana de São Paulo, observada no período compreendido entre os anos de 1991 e 2010, quando analisamos, à luz de dados censitários, como diferentes padrões da estrutura ocupacional nessas duas décadas condicionaram a dinâmica da pobreza. / In Brazil, poverty has been interpreted, in most cases, from its relations with the labor market, the tight scope of social protection and the process of the expansion of the paid labor force. In the other hand, the studies about occupational structure dont use to embrace poverty as a phenomenon to be analyzed. Usually, poverty is seemed as a residue of the social stratification dynamics. This research aims to show how we can incorporate the occupational structure and its relationship with the economic changes and social protection, to analyze poverty. We use the Metropolitan Area of São Paulo between the years of 1991 and 2010 as a case study; based on census data we analyze how different patterns of occupational structure in these two decades constrained the dynamics of poverty.

Page generated in 0.1418 seconds