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Who's Not Working and Why Frederic L. Pryor (Swarthmore College, Pennsylvania)

Who's Not Working and Why By Frederic L. Pryor (Swarthmore College, Pennsylvania)

Who's Not Working and Why by Frederic L. Pryor (Swarthmore College, Pennsylvania)


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Summary

This 1999 book presents a radically different view of the operations of the labor market. Professors Pryor and Schaffer explain why wages have become more unequal, why wages in those jobs requiring extra-high cognitive skills have risen and why all other wages have stagnated or fallen in the last quarter century.

Who's Not Working and Why Summary

Who's Not Working and Why: Employment, Cognitive Skills, Wages, and the Changing U.S. Labor Market by Frederic L. Pryor (Swarthmore College, Pennsylvania)

Presenting a radically different view of the operations of the labor market, in this 1999 book Professors Pryor and Schaffer explain the growing inequality in wages and how those with the least education are being squeezed out of the labor market. Why have wages in those jobs requiring extra-high cognitive skills risen while all other wages have stagnated or fallen? And why are more university graduates taking high-school jobs? The authors of this volume present data revealing that jobs which require a high educational level are increasing more slowly than those with somewhat lower requirements. However such jobs are increasing faster than those requiring still less formal education. Professors Pryor and Schaffer also show how women are replacing men in jobs which require higher levels of education and, moreover, how those with high cognitive skills are replacing those with lower cognitive skills.

Who's Not Working and Why Reviews

Their approach is novel and so are their conclusions. Choice
Frederic L. Pryor and David L. Schaffer, in Who's Not Working and Why, explore the impact of those changes on the distribution of jobs and wages and on the character of structural unemployment. Their arguments are illuminating and provocative...they are well worth heeding. A valuable contribution to the literature on changing patterns of employment, the work is suitable for upper-level undergraduate and graduate courses dealing with labor economics or the character of the new economy. Perspectives on Political Science
Pryor and Schaffer perform a useful service by offering a novel analysis of the three major labor-market phenomena of the past three decades -- rising inequality, growing female participation in the labor force and, until recently, higher unemployment at each cyclical peak. Instead of the usual focus on formal education, they demonstrate the importance of cognitive skills and their differential use among occupations. Their approach should force a rethinking of our views of the central facts of the American labor market. Daniel S. Hamermesh, University of Texas, Austin
Pryor and Schaffer perform a useful service by offering a novel analysis of the three major labor-market phenomena of the past three decades -- rising inequality, growing female participation in the labor force and, until recently, higher unemployment at each cyclical peak. Instead of the usual focus on formal education, they demonstrate the importance of cognitive skills and their differential use among occupations. Their approach should force a rethinking of our views of the central facts of the American labor market. Daniel S. Hamermesh, University of Texas, Austin
Pryor and Schaffer have produced an extremely insightful analysis of the growing inequality of wage incomes in U.S. labor markets and the decline in job opportunities for adult males. Their book both challenges and extends much of the conventional wisdom on the role of education and cognitive skills as determinants of these trends. Barry Bosworth, Brookings Institution
The authors use a wealth of datasets and many different statistical methodologies to quantify the causes of what they call a fundamental failure of the US labor market. In doing so, Pryor and Schaffer debunk the myth that the low-skilled have been disproportionately hurt by imports, immigration, and changes in industry mix. Surprisingly, they show that the demand for workers in low-skilled occupations has actually increased over the last three decades, rather than decreased. Nevertheless, their policy prescriptions include the upgrading of workers skillsets. This volume offers a comprehensive and coherent examination of the key explanations for the hollowing out of the US labor market. Olivia Mitchell, The Wharton School
The authors use a wealth of datasets and many different statistical methodologies to quantify the causes of what they call a fundamental failure of the US labor market. In doing so, Pryor and Schaffer debunk the myth that the low-skilled have been disproportionately hurt by imports, immigration, and changes in industry mix. Surprisingly, they show that the demand for workers in low-skilled occupations has actually increased over the last three decades, rather than decreased. Nevertheless, their policy prescriptions include the upgrading of workers skillsets. This volume offers a comprehensive and coherent examination of the key explanations for the hollowing out of the US labor market. Olivia Mitchell, The Wharton School
Their approach is novel and so are their conclusions. Choice
Their approach is novel and so are their conclusions. Choice
In this ingenious and important book, Pryor and Schaffer attempt to make sense of observations about resent U.S. history. Part of what makes their treatment ingenious is the fact that they supplement the Current Population Survey, the customary source in this sort of inquiry, with data on cognitive capacities from the National Adult Literacy Survey, which contain information on both language and quantitative skills. Canada Review of Sociology Anthropology

Table of Contents

Acknowledgements; Part I. Introduction: 1. The changing labor market; Part II. Employment, Cognitive Skills, and Job Displacement: 2. Cognitive skills, education, and other determinants of employment; 3. Upskilling and educational upgrading of occupations; 4. Labor force displacement mechanisms; Part III. Wage Levels and Distribution: 5. Wage levels; 6. The Distribution of Hourly Wages; Part IV. Alternative Approaches: 7. Five misleading theories about joblessness; 8. Notes on subjective and institutional factors; Part V. Implications and Interpretations: 9. Final observations; Appendices; Bibliography; Name index; Subject index.

Additional information

NPB9780521651523
9780521651523
0521651522
Who's Not Working and Why: Employment, Cognitive Skills, Wages, and the Changing U.S. Labor Market by Frederic L. Pryor (Swarthmore College, Pennsylvania)
New
Hardback
Cambridge University Press
19990113
316
N/A
Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary.
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