Format:
1 Online-Ressource
Content:
It has been argued that workplace skills are becoming more polarized in Britain. This tendency is sometimes considered to be a factor contributing to the process of social exclusion and growing wage inequality. Skill polarization has therefore been the focus of renewed academic and - since the election of the Labor government - political interest. In some respects, previous survey evidence for the 1980s can be used to support the skill polarization thesis. This paper investigates whether the process has continued into the 1990s among those in work. Our main finding is that there has been no overriding process of skill polarization between 1992 and 1997. However, the picture is complex, with losers as well as winners. Among the winners are full-timers, employees and those employed by "modern" organizations. The losers, on the other hand, include those in part-time work, the self-employed and those employed in organizations with less progressive management practices
Note:
In: Cambridge Journal of Economics, Vol. 24, Issue 6, November 2000
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Language:
English
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