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Within-Occupation Changes Dominate Changes in What Workers Do: A Shift-Share Decomposition, 2005–2015

Richard B. Freeman, Ina Ganguli, Michael Handel

2020AEA Papers and Proceedings36 citationsDOI

Abstract

This paper measures aggregate changes in job characteristics in the United States from 2005 to 2015 and decomposes those changes into components representing shifts within occupations and changes in occupational employment shares. Per our title, within-occupation changes dominate, raising doubts about the ability of projections based on expected changes in the occupational composition of employment to capture the likely future of work. Indeed, our data show only weak relationships between automatability, repetitiveness, and other job attributes and changes in occupational employment. The results suggest that analysts give greater attention to within-occupation impacts of technology in assessing the future of work.

Topics & Concepts

DecompositionDemographic economicsWork (physics)Occupational mobilityAggregate (composite)Labour economicsEconomicsEngineeringEcologyBiologyMaterials scienceMechanical engineeringComposite materialEmployment and Welfare StudiesLabor market dynamics and wage inequalityRegional Economic and Spatial Analysis
Within-Occupation Changes Dominate Changes in What Workers Do: A Shift-Share Decomposition, 2005–2015 | Litcius