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What Does Non-standard Employment Look Like in the United States? An Empirical Typology of Employment Quality
Authors:Peckham  Trevor  Flaherty  Brian  Hajat  Anjum  Fujishiro  Kaori  Jacoby  Dan  Seixas  Noah
Institution:1.University of Washington Department of Environmental and Occupational Health Sciences, 4225 Roosevelt Way NE, Suite 100, Box 354695, Seattle, WA, 98195, USA
;2.University of Washington Department of Psychology, Seattle, WA, USA
;3.University of Washington Department of Epidemiology, Seattle, WA, USA
;4.Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), Cincinnati, OH, USA
;5.School of Interdisciplinary Arts and Sciences, University of Washington-Bothell, Bothell, WA, USA
;6.University of Washington Department of Environmental and Occupational Health Sciences, Seattle, WA, USA
;
Abstract:

Despite significant interest in the changing nature of employment as a critical social and economic challenge facing society—especially the decline in the so-called Standard Employment Relationship (SER) and rise in more insecure, precarious forms of employment—scholars have struggled to operationalize the multifaceted and heterogeneous nature of contemporary worker-employer relationships within empirical analyses. Here we investigate the character and distribution of employment relationships in the U.S., drawing on a representative sample of wage-earners and self-employed from the General Social Survey (2002–2018). We use the multidimensional construct of employment quality, which includes both contractual (e.g., wages, contract type) and relational (e.g., employee representation and participation) aspects of employment. We further employ a typological measurement approach, using latent class analysis, to explicitly examine how the multiple aspects of employment cluster together in modern labor markets. We present eight distinct employment types in the U.S., including one resembling the historical conception of the SER model (24% of the total workforce), and others representing various constellations of favorable and adverse employment features. These employment types are unevenly distributed across society, in terms of who works these jobs and where they are found in the labor market. Importantly, women, those with lower education, and younger workers are more likely to be in precarious forms of employment. More generally, our typology reveals limitations associated with binary conceptions of standard vs. non-standard employment, or insider–outsider dichotomies envisioned within dual labor market theories.

Keywords:
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