Trading away what kind of jobs? globalization, trade and tasks in the US economy
Trading away what kind of jobs? globalization, trade and tasks in the US economy
Economists and other social scientists are calling for a reassessment of the impact of international trade on labor markets in developed and developing countries. Classical models of globalization and trade, based upon the international exchange of finished goods, fail to capture the fragmentation of much commodity production and the geographical separation of individual production tasks. This fragmentation, captured in the growing volume of intra-industry trade, prompts investigation of the effects of trade within, rather than between, sectors of the economy. In this paper we examine the relationship between international trade and the task structure of US employment. We link disaggregate US trade data from 1972 to 2006, the NBER manufacturing database, the Decennial Census, and occupational and task data from the Dictionary of Occupational Titles. Within-industry shifts in task characteristics are linked to import competition and technological change. Our results suggest that trade has played a major role in the growth in relative demand for nonroutine tasks, particularly those requiring high levels of interpersonal interaction.
1-16
Kemeny, Thomas
b9e4ac0c-bc73-4905-8229-f970518cde88
Rigby, David
6b590eec-ab59-4fe6-8f6c-606bc40732a6
1 March 2012
Kemeny, Thomas
b9e4ac0c-bc73-4905-8229-f970518cde88
Rigby, David
6b590eec-ab59-4fe6-8f6c-606bc40732a6
Kemeny, Thomas and Rigby, David
(2012)
Trading away what kind of jobs? globalization, trade and tasks in the US economy.
Review of World Economics, 148 (1), .
(doi:10.1007/s10290-011-0099-5).
Abstract
Economists and other social scientists are calling for a reassessment of the impact of international trade on labor markets in developed and developing countries. Classical models of globalization and trade, based upon the international exchange of finished goods, fail to capture the fragmentation of much commodity production and the geographical separation of individual production tasks. This fragmentation, captured in the growing volume of intra-industry trade, prompts investigation of the effects of trade within, rather than between, sectors of the economy. In this paper we examine the relationship between international trade and the task structure of US employment. We link disaggregate US trade data from 1972 to 2006, the NBER manufacturing database, the Decennial Census, and occupational and task data from the Dictionary of Occupational Titles. Within-industry shifts in task characteristics are linked to import competition and technological change. Our results suggest that trade has played a major role in the growth in relative demand for nonroutine tasks, particularly those requiring high levels of interpersonal interaction.
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Published date: 1 March 2012
Organisations:
Economy, Society and Space
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Local EPrints ID: 369534
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/369534
ISSN: 1610-2878
PURE UUID: 57bf7f4d-1ea2-43dd-a8ee-1d968df18c9f
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Date deposited: 06 Oct 2014 10:56
Last modified: 14 Mar 2024 18:05
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Author:
Thomas Kemeny
Author:
David Rigby
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