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The skill-divide in job quality: A cross-national analysis of 28 countries
Institution:1. Research Institute of Social Development, Southwestern University of Finance and Economics, China;2. Centre for Research on Ageing, University of Southampton, UK;3. ESRC Centre for Population Change, University of Southampton, UK
Abstract:This study focuses on the skill divide in job quality and the role of social institutions in structuring the relation of workers’ qualifications to the attributes of their jobs. Four measures of job quality are examined: job security, job achievement, job content and work schedule flexibility. The study is based on the 2005 ISSP module on work orientations and encompasses 28 countries. Obtained through multilevel modeling, the findings show that low-skilled workers are disadvantaged in all aspects of job quality. However, skill inequality in the quality of employment depends on countries’ characteristics, with declining inequality in countries at higher levels of technological development and to some extent also in times of technological growth. At times of high unemployment, skill disparities in job security widen while on other measures of job quality they decline. Under high market regulation, the low skilled enjoy better job security but on other measures, skill inequalities increase.
Keywords:Job quality  Job attributes  Skill divide  Technological developments  Cross-national analysis
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