Robert Z. Lawrence, Single World, Divided Nations? International Trade and OECD Labor Markets

1997 ◽  
Vol 25 (3) ◽  
pp. 461-464
Author(s):  
James K. Galbraith
Author(s):  
Robert Paarlberg

Is there a single world food system? There is not yet a single centrally governed world food system. Food is still produced and consumed mostly inside separate and separately governed nation-states. International food markets have grown, but international trade still supplies on average only 10...


2019 ◽  
Vol 109 ◽  
pp. 1-32 ◽  
Author(s):  
David H. Autor

US cities today are vastly more educated and skill-intensive than they were five decades ago. Yet, urban non-college workers perform substantially less skilled jobs than decades earlier. This deskilling reflects the joint effects of automation and, secondarily, rising international trade, which have eliminated the bulk of non-college production, administrative support, and clerical jobs, yielding a disproportionate polarization of urban labor markets. The unwinding of the urban non-college occupational skill gradient has, I argue, abetted a secular fall in real non-college wages by: (1) shunting non-college workers out of specialized middle-skill occupations into low-wage occupations that require only generic skills; (2) diminishing the set of non-college workers that hold middle-skill jobs in high-wage cities; and (3) attenuating, to a startling degree, the steep urban wage premium for non-college workers that prevailed in earlier decades. Changes in the nature of work--many of which are technological in origin--have been more disruptive and less beneficial for non-college than college workers.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Raymond Robertson ◽  
Mexico Alberto Vergara Bahena ◽  
Deeksha Kokas ◽  
Gladys Lopez-Acevedo

Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document