Automation and occupational wage trends: what role for unions and collective bargaining?

"Routine-biased technological change has emerged as a leading explanation for the differential wage growth of routine occupations, such as manufacturers or office clerks, relative to less routine occupations. Less clear, however, is how the effects of technological advancement on occupational w...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Parolin, Zachary
Institution:ETUI-European Trade Union Institute
Format: TEXT
Language:English
Published: Luxembourg 2019
LIS
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.labourline.org/KENTIKA-19308482124911266649-automation-and-occupational-wa.htm
_version_ 1771659902742167554
author Parolin, Zachary
author_facet Parolin, Zachary
collection Library items
description "Routine-biased technological change has emerged as a leading explanation for the differential wage growth of routine occupations, such as manufacturers or office clerks, relative to less routine occupations. Less clear, however, is how the effects of technological advancement on occupational wage trends vary across political-institutional context. This paper investigates the extent to which collective bargaining agreements and union coverage shape the relative wage growth of occupations at higher risk of automation. Using data from the Luxembourg Income Study and the U.S. Current Population Survey, I measure the ‘routine task intensity’ of occupations across 15 OECD Member States and the 50 United States from the 1980s onward. Findings suggest that bargaining coverage is more consequential for the wage growth of high routine occupations relative to less routine occupations, and that high routine occupations lose coverage at a faster rate when bargaining coverage at the national level declines. As a result, declines in bargaining coverage within a country are associated with declining relative wage growth for occupations at higher risk of automation. Estimates suggest that had union coverage in the U.S. not declined from 1984 levels, the earnings of high routine occupations might have grown at the same rate as low pay occupations between 1984 and 2015, rather than experiencing a relative wage decline. However, the findings also suggest that gains in the relative wage growth may increasingly come at the cost of reduced employment shares of high routine occupations."
format TEXT
geographic OECD countries
id 19308482124911266649_f4db4c22fdc24c81bd1891a334ee0b8a
institution ETUI-European Trade Union Institute
is_hierarchy_id 19308482124911266649_f4db4c22fdc24c81bd1891a334ee0b8a
is_hierarchy_title Automation and occupational wage trends: what role for unions and collective bargaining?
language English
physical 55 p.
Digital
publishDate 2019
publisher Luxembourg
LIS
spellingShingle Parolin, Zachary
wages
wage increase
trade union role
collective bargaining
technological change
job content
automation
Automation and occupational wage trends: what role for unions and collective bargaining?
thumbnail https://www.labourline.org/Image_prev.jpg?Archive=138641395682
title Automation and occupational wage trends: what role for unions and collective bargaining?
topic wages
wage increase
trade union role
collective bargaining
technological change
job content
automation
url https://www.labourline.org/KENTIKA-19308482124911266649-automation-and-occupational-wa.htm