Litcius/Paper detail

Jobless and Burnt Out: Digital Inequality and Online Access to the Labor Market

Stefano De Marco, Guillaume Dumont, Ellen Helsper, Alejandro Díaz-Guerra Romero, Mirko Antino, Alfredo Rodríguez‐Muñoz, José Luis Martínez Cantos

2023Social Inclusion13 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

This article examines how inequalities in digital skills shape the outcomes of online job‐seeking processes. Building on a representative survey of Spanish job seekers, we show that people with high digital skill levels have a greater probability of securing a job online, because of their ability to create a coherent profile and make their application visible. Additionally, it is less probable that they will experience burnout during this process than job seekers with low digital skill levels. Given the concentration of digital skills amongst people with high levels of material and digital resources, we conclude that the internet enforces existing material and health inequalities.

Topics & Concepts

SeekersInequalityThe InternetProcess (computing)Digital transformationBusinessDemographic economicsPsychologyLabour economicsComputer scienceEconomicsPolitical scienceMathematicsWorld Wide WebOperating systemLawMathematical analysisEmployment and Welfare StudiesDigital Economy and Work TransformationWork-Family Balance Challenges