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The Causes of Structural Unemployment (eBook)

Four Factors that Keep People from the Jobs they Deserve
eBook Download: EPUB
2014
John Wiley & Sons (Verlag)
978-0-7456-8413-0 (ISBN)

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The Causes of Structural Unemployment - Thomas Janoski, David Luke, Christopher Oliver
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There is a specter haunting advanced industrial countries: structural unemployment. Recent years have seen growing concern over declining jobs, and though corporate profits have picked up after the Great Recession of 2008, jobs have not. It is possible that “jobless recoveries” could become a permanent feature of Western economies.
This illuminating book focuses on the employment futures of advanced industrial countries, providing readers with the sociological imagination to appreciate the bigger picture of where workers fit in the new international division of labor. The authors piece together a puzzle that reveals deep structural forces underlying unemployment: skills mismatches caused by a shift from manufacturing to service jobs; increased offshoring in search of lower wages; the rise of advanced communication and automated technologies; and the growing financialization of the global economy that aggravates all of these factors. Weaving together varied literatures and data, the authors also consider what actions and policy initiatives societies might take to alleviate these threats.
Addressing a problem that should be front and center for political economists and policymakers, this book will be illuminating reading for students of the sociology of work, labor studies, inequality, and economic sociology.

Thomas Janoski is Professor of Sociology at the University of Kentucky
Christopher Oliver is Lecturer in Sociology at the University of Kentucky
David Luke is Research Assistant at the University of Kentucky
There is a specter haunting advanced industrial countries: structural unemployment. Recent years have seen growing concern over declining jobs, and though corporate profits have picked up after the Great Recession of 2008, jobs have not. It is possible that jobless recoveries could become a permanent feature of Western economies. This illuminating book focuses on the employment futures of advanced industrial countries, providing readers with the sociological imagination to appreciate the bigger picture of where workers fit in the new international division of labor. The authors piece together a puzzle that reveals deep structural forces underlying unemployment: skills mismatches caused by a shift from manufacturing to service jobs; increased offshoring in search of lower wages; the rise of advanced communication and automated technologies; and the growing financialization of the global economy that aggravates all of these factors. Weaving together varied literatures and data, the authors also consider what actions and policy initiatives societies might take to alleviate these threats. Addressing a problem that should be front and center for political economists and policymakers, this book will be illuminating reading for students of the sociology of work, labor studies, inequality, and economic sociology.

Thomas Janoski is Professor of Sociology at the University of Kentucky Christopher Oliver is Lecturer in Sociology at the University of Kentucky David Luke is Research Assistant at the University of Kentucky

Tables, Figures, and Boxes viii

Abbreviations x

Acknowledgments xiii

1 Introduction 1

2 Shifting from Manufacturing to Services and Skill Mismatches 26

3 Transnational Corporations Enthralled with Outsourcing and Offshoring 53

4 Technological Change and Job Loss 82

5 Global Trade, Shareholder Value, and Financialization as Structural Causes of Unemployment 113

6 Fixing Structural Unemployment 142

7 Conclusion: Can We Trust Transnational Corporations? 173

Notes 179

References 190

Subject Index 214

Name Index 223

''The authors deftly integrate sociological, political, and economic perspectives to highlight the major changes in the structure of labor markets that are responsible for the upsurge in the structural unemployment and economic inequality that haunt the contemporary United States.''
Arne L. Kalleberg, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

''The Causes of Structural Unemployment is a comprehensive look at the causes of long-term structural unemployment in affluent industrialized nations. It combines and illustrates how individual biographies are tied up to larger social and economic processes - how the single-minded focus on shareholder value and market manipulations destroys the labor market for good jobs.''
Kevin T. Leicht, University of Iowa"This is a well-researched book with detailed references. It successfully links globalisation to the rise of long-term unemployment in the advanced Western countries."
Political Studies Review

1

Introduction

To somewhat alter a phrase from Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels, “A specter is haunting advanced industrial countries and it is structural unemployment.” In Europe, Spain and Greece are facing unemployment rates over 25 percent. The decline in jobs that comes and goes with the economic ups and downs of the business cycle – cyclical unemployment – is being supplanted by more permanent and disrupting unemployment that threatens the working and middle classes. A 2012 Pew survey of 1,297 Americans says that in the preceding fifteen years, the middle class had “shrunk in size, fallen backward in income and wealth, and shed some – but by no means all – of its characteristic faith in the future” (Pew, 2012:1). Michael Gibbs says that the American “middle class is on the verge of extinction” (2010:B8). The economic recovery after 2001 was unusually weak in providing employment, and since 2004, observers have been increasingly talking about “jobless recoveries”− when an economy experiences growth in GDP while employment stagnates. While the stock market has recovered from the “great recession” of 2008, employment has not. This collapse was considered to be cyclical by many, but much of this landslide of unemployment is clearly structural. The recovery of profits and corporate performance has not resurrected the job market.

Structural unemployment and futile job searches are common, and the most recent generation of young job seekers is being called “the Recession Generation” or “Generation R.” There are two versions of Generation R: underworked 20-somethings cannot get their first job and live at home, and overworked 20-somethings hang on to their jobs but have to do twice as much work because employers have cut their workforce to the bone (Schott, 2010; Godofsky et al., 2010; Newman, 1999, 2012). In response to these jobless recoveries, this book explains the four causes of structural unemployment and rising inequality, and then proposes policies to alleviate joblessness.

In our view, the four causes of structural unemployment and downward mobility are diverse and not commonly put together in the same breath. First, the most discussed features of unemployment come from “skill mismatches” caused by the shift from manufacturing to service jobs. Blue-collar skills are a poor fit with white-collar or service jobs. But there is more going on here than a simple need for retraining. Second, corporate offshoring in search of lower wages has moved large numbers of jobs to China, India, and other countries, and this has decimated manufacturing and some white-collar jobs. Offshoring requires massive amounts of direct foreign investment and a consulting industry that backs it up. It is especially caused by two corporate forms of lean production. Third, technology in the form of containerships, computers, and automation has replaced many jobs. The web has devastated jobs in newspapers, magazines, the postal service, and travel agencies. The internet also aids offshoring because it allows people to do information-intensive jobs from anywhere in the world. Automation and robotics reduce jobs on assembly lines throughout the world, and create only a few more jobs in designing and maintaining equipment. And although information technology also leads to new jobs, it does not produce enough jobs in the short term to balance the losses. Fourth, instability in global finance creates pressures for offshoring and makes recessions more frequent and longer. This intensifies the previous three factors by causing downturns that become structural as they increase the duration of unemployment. In sum, new jobs emerge in less-developed countries (LDCs), but these four forces destroy jobs in advanced industrialized countries with an instantaneous, worldwide system of communication.

Economic, Political Economy and Institutional Explanations


There are some differences between the way we use the term “structural unemployment” and the way economists generally use it. We take a macro-sociological approach based on a critical view of political economy. The strength of the economic approach is the creation of a tightly linked theory with a narrow focus on a limited number of variables. In a sense, most economic analyses of unemployment are generally limited to job vacancies, inflation, and economic growth, sometimes adding investment (especially when they move to explaining growth rather than jobs) (Daly et al., 2012; Acemoglu, 2009). The results seem to be tightly focused on mismatch – the first of our four explanations. While this explanation has some validity, sole reliance on it often leads to “blaming the victim” – it's the unemployed workers' fault that they have not retrained or chosen a better occupation. As a result, this approach has little to say about outsourcing, offshoring, ancillary technologies, and the detrimental effects of financialization on unemployment.1

Our wider view of structural unemployment builds on some of the mismatch analysis, but focuses more on the conflict between denationalized transnational corporations and employees in advanced industrialized countries (AICs). This is partially a class-conflict approach using elite or neo-Marxist theory with offshore-based profit taking, and an institutional or Weberian analysis of multination states struggling to maintain control of corporations and protect their citizens in a global economic environment. As one can see, the economic results of the last few decades have favored transnational corporations, with their high profits, and the upper classes getting a historically high proportion of income and especially wealth (Goldstein, 2012). Former middle-class citizens have suffered greater unemployment and then a downward shift to lower-paid jobs. In some ways a new social contract is in the initial stages of being forged, with the powerful transnational corporations having the upper hand at this point. This is why explanations that do not use a wider lens − focusing on financialization, the declining middle class, growing inequality, and transnational corporations − are quite myopic. We will discuss economic studies that we believe show that a structural shift has occurred, but our explanations will be much broader than most of these analyses. For instance, in the aftermath of the recession of 2008, Daly et al. say that “a better understanding of the determinants of job creation in the aftermath of recession is crucial” (2012:24). Thus, our intent is to explain unemployment with three additional arguments involving a panorama of American workers in a new and complex division of labor.

In the next sections we discuss (1) the definitions, levels, and types of unemployment, with a focus on structural unemployment, including the Beveridge and Phillips curves, the duration of unemployment, and the stigma involved in current increases in the duration of unemployment; (2) the impact of unemployment on inequality, which starts with unemployment and leads to decreasing one's expectations of work to the lower-level segments of the labor market; and (3) the four factors that cause structural unemployment – the shift to service jobs and skill mismatches, outsourcing and offshoring, new technologies, and structural financialization – which is the main focus of this book; and we end with (4) our governmental policy recommendations to alleviate structural unemployment.

Definitions, Levels, and Types of Unemployment


Unemployment is generally defined as the number of persons who are ready and willing to work who cannot find a job. The unemployment rate consists of those persons who are unemployed divided by the total labor force, which includes the unemployed. It is important to note that if a person is not ready and willing to work, which means that they are not actively searching for a job, then that person is considered to be out of the labor force and is therefore neither employed nor unemployed. These “discouraged workers” are removed from the unemployment figures and the overall labor force. People can leave the labor force by routes including retiring early, going on disability, working in the underground or illegal economy, or simply living upon the contributions of others (e.g., family, friends, or the government).

There are two methods for collecting unemployment figures. One method uses a sample survey of the population to find out the number of unemployed and those who are working. The other method relies on the administrative records of the employment service or other agency that gives out unemployment compensation payments and often gives job search advice. The survey research method of collecting the data is generally considered to be the most accurate way to determine unemployment rates because the administrative record method can miss people who do not want to receive unemployment compensation (Davis et al., 2010). Often those people who anticipate only a short stay on unemployment fall into this category, although there are a few people who are ideologically opposed to the idea of government and will refuse their unemployment compensation payments and use their retirement or other savings to tide them over during various bouts of unemployment.

The OECD has devised a method to standardize or harmonize these two diverse methods of collecting unemployment data so that countries can be easily compared. Section (a) of table 1.1 shows some of these harmonized rates for a number of countries, and figure 1.1 graphs the US unemployment rate from 1950 to...

Erscheint lt. Verlag 27.6.2014
Reihe/Serie Work & Society
Work & Society
Work & Society
Sprache englisch
Themenwelt Sozialwissenschaften Politik / Verwaltung
Sozialwissenschaften Soziologie Spezielle Soziologien
Wirtschaft Betriebswirtschaft / Management Planung / Organisation
Wirtschaft Volkswirtschaftslehre Makroökonomie
Schlagworte Arbeits- u. Demographische Ökonomie • Arbeits- u. Demographische Ökonomie • Economics • Labor & Demographic Economics • Sociology • Sociology of Organizations & Work • Sociology of Science & Technology • Soziologie • Soziologie am Arbeitsplatz • Soziologie d. Naturwissenschaft u. Technik • Volkswirtschaftslehre • work, labor, outsourcing, offshoring, lean production, mechanization, jobs, jobless recovery, economy, sociology
ISBN-10 0-7456-8413-0 / 0745684130
ISBN-13 978-0-7456-8413-0 / 9780745684130
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