The role of skills and tasks in changing employment trends and income inequality in Chile

Keywords: wage inequality, job polarization, skills, tasks, decomposition methods, Chile

Abstract

Using decomposition methods, we analyse the role of the changing nature of work in explaining changes in employment, wage inequality, and job polarization in Chile from 1992 to 2017. Changes in occupational structure confirm a displacement of workers from low-skill occupations towards jobs demanding non-routine higher skills (professionals and technicians), and to jobs demanding routine manual and cognitive tasks (services and sales). Changes in occupational earnings have had an equalizing effect, with more substantial gains in favour of lower-skill occupations and also at the top of the skill premium. Inequality reductions since the 2000s are explained by a fall in earnings in the top percentiles of the distribution, which have been reallocated most noticeably around the median (2000–06) and the bottom 30 per cent (2006–17). Changes in the returns to education and the relocation of workers towards less-routine occupations have contributed to the inequality reduction.

Más información

Título de la Revista: WIDER Working Paper
Volumen: 48/2021
Editorial: UNU-WIDER 2021
Fecha de publicación: 2021
Idioma: inglés
Financiamiento/Sponsor: UNU-WIDER 2021
URL: https://www.wider.unu.edu/publication/role-skills-and-tasks-changing-employment-trends-and-income-inequality-chile
Notas: Open source journal, peer-reviewed in-house