Academic Literature

2000, The great reversal in the demand for skill

“What explains the current low rate of employment in the US?”  asks

Paul Beaudry, David A. Green and Ben Sand in

The great reversal in the demand for skill and cognitive tasks. (quotes to follow)

While there has substantial debate over this question in recent years, we believe that considerable added insight can be derived by focusing on changes in the labour market at the turn of the century. In particular, we argue that in about the year 2000, the demand for skill (or, more specifically, for cognitive tasks often associated with high educational skill) underwent a reversal. Capture d’écran 2013-08-12 à 07.17.52

Many researchers have documented a strong, ongoing increase in the demand for skills in the decades leading up to 2000. In this paper, we document a decline in that demand in the years since 2000, even as the supply of high education workers continues to grow. We go on to show that, in response to this demand reversal, high-skilled workers have moved down the occupational ladder and have begun to perform jobs traditionally performed by lower-skilled workers. This de-skilling process, in turn, results in high-skilled workers pushing low-skilled workers even further down the occupational ladder and, to some degree, out of the labor force all together. In order to understand these patterns, we offer a simple extension to the standard skill biased technical change model that views cognitive tasks as a stock rather than a flow. We show how such a model can explain the trends in the data that we present, and offers a novel interpretation of the current employment situation in the US.

Chosen excerpts by Job Market Monitor. Read the whole story at 

Capture d’écran 2013-08-12 à 07.18.56

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