Unemployment: skills, gender and social exclusion

Authors

  • Vani K. BOROOAH University of Ulster, School of Public Policy Economics and Law

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.18778/1231-1952.5.2.03

Keywords:

labour market, unemployment, global economy

Abstract

The demand for unskilled labour has collapsed across all the countries of the OECD. In the United States, this showed up primarily in falling real wages for less-educated men; in the countries of Europe. it took the form of increased joblessness for the less skilled. Consequently, there was a reduction in both the number of unskilled jobs available and also in the real wages associated with such jobs. In explaining this collapse, US economists emphasise the role of technology, while European economist emphasise the role of trade. In fact the two causes are not independent but highly related. These changes have affected males particularly badly because much of job-creation in OECD countries has been in part-time jobs which have mainly been taken by women. High and stubborn male joblessness has, in tum, led to the creation of an 'underclass' so that a perversion of values and attitudes transforms people from being unemployed to becoming unemployable.

Downloads

Download data is not yet available.

References

AKERLOFF, G. (1998), Men without children, "Economic Journal", 108: 287-309.
Google Scholar

ANDERSON, E. (1991), Neighbourhood effects on teenage pregnancy, [in:] JENCKS, C. and PETERSON, P. E., The urban underclass, Washington, DC: The Brookings Institution.
Google Scholar

BALLS, E. and GREGG, P. (1993), Work and welfare: tackling the jobs deficit, The Commission on Social Justice, Discussion Paper, 3, London: Institute of Public Policy Research.
Google Scholar

Commission of the European Communities (CEC), (1993), Growth competitiveness, employment: the challenges and ways forward into the 21st century, Luxembourg: Office for the Official Publications of the European Communities.
Google Scholar

Employment Policy Institute, (1996), Employment audit (Summer).
Google Scholar

FREEMAN, R. (1990), Crime and disadvantaged youth, Working Paper, 3875, Boston: National Bureau of Economic Research.
Google Scholar

GREGG, P. and WADSWORTH, J. (1996), The importance of making work pay, London: Employment Policy Institute (February).
Google Scholar

HEAD, S. (1996) The new, ruthless economy, "The New York Review of Books", 29 February.
Google Scholar

HEWITT, P. (1993), About time: the revolution in work and family life, London: IPPR/Rivers Oram Press.
Google Scholar

JENCKS, C. (1991), ls the American underclass growing?, [in:] JENCKS, C. and PETERSON, P. E., The urban underclass, Washington, DC: The Brookings Institution.
Google Scholar

JENCKS, C. (1992), Rethinking social policy: race, poverty and the underclass, Cambridge, Mass: Harvard University Press.
Google Scholar

LAYARD, R., NICKELL S. and JACKMAN, R. (1994), The unemployment crisis, Oxford: Oxford University Press.
Google Scholar

LUTTWAK, E. (1993), The endangered American dream: how to stop the United States from becoming a third world country and how to win the geo-economic struggle for industrial supremacy, New York: Simon and Schuster.
Google Scholar

McLAUGHLIN, E. (1994), Employment, unemployment and social security, [in:] GLYN, A. and MILIBAND, D. (eds), Paying for inequality: the economic cost of social injustice, London: Oram Press.
Google Scholar

McCORMICK, B. (1991), Unemployment structure and the unemployment puzzle, London: Employment Institute.
Google Scholar

McKinsey Global Institute, (1993), Manufacturing productivity, New York: McKinsey and Company.
Google Scholar

MEAD (1992), The new politics of poverty, New York: Basic Books.
Google Scholar

MURRAY, C. A. (1984), Losing ground: American social policy, 1950-1980, New York: Basic Books.
Google Scholar

MURRAY, C. A. (1990), The emerging British underclass, London: Institute of Economic Affairs.
Google Scholar

OECD, (1997), Economic outlook, Paris.
Google Scholar

PETERSON, P. E. (1996), The urban underclass and the poverty paradox, [in:] JENCKS, C. and PETERSON, P. E., The urban underclass, Washington, DC: The Brookings Institution.
Google Scholar

SCHMITT, J. and WADSWORTH, J. (1994), Why are two million men inactive? The decline in male labour force participation in Britain, Working Paper, 336, London: LSE Centre For Economic Performance (March).
Google Scholar

WILSON, W. J. (1987), The truly disadvantaged, Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
Google Scholar

WILSON, W. J. (1996), When work disappears, New York: Albert A. Knopf.
Google Scholar

WOOD, A. (1994), North-South trade, employment and inequality, Oxford: Clarendon Press.
Google Scholar

Downloads

Published

1998-12-30

How to Cite

BOROOAH, V. K. (1998). Unemployment: skills, gender and social exclusion. European Spatial Research and Policy, 5(2), 41–54. https://doi.org/10.18778/1231-1952.5.2.03

Issue

Section

Articles