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The gender dimension of technical change and the role of task inputs
Authors:Joanne Lindley
Institution:1. Faculty of Economics and Jesus College, University of Cambridge, UK and CESifo, Munich, Germany;2. School of Economics, University of Nottingham, U.K. and IIEP-CONICET Argentina;3. University of Hanover and CESifo, Munich Germany
Abstract:By 2011, the employment shares of UK graduate men and women had become equal for the first time. With no evidence of a significantly declining graduate female–male wage differential, this suggests that the relative demand for graduate women must have increased in order to accommodate the faster increase in their relative supply. However, gender clustering in degree subjects suggests that male and female graduates may not be perfect substitutes in production and therefore that gender biases may exist in the relative demand and supply of graduate labour. Consequently, this paper investigates whether industry level skill demand shifts have differed for men and women, focussing specifically on the role of technical change and job task inputs. The paper shows that, despite the large growth in the percentage of women obtaining a degree, overall women lost out from technical change between 1997 and 2006. This was most likely as a consequence of their lower quality numeracy and literacy skills, as well as other skills required to undertake the tasks that are correlated with technical change, especially in highly computerised private sector industries like finance and machine manufacturing.
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