Search engine for discovering works of Art, research articles, and books related to Art and Culture
ShareThis
Javascript must be enabled to continue!

Automation, Occupational Earnings Trends, and the Moderating Role of Organized Labor

View through CrossRef
Routine-biased technological change has emerged as the dominant explanation for the differential earnings growth of occupations at greater risk of automation, such as machine operators or office clerks, relative to less routine occupations. In contrast, this paper finds that the declining earnings returns to an occupation’s routine task intensity (RTI) can largely be attributed to the decline of organized labor. Using individual-level data on 3.3 million employed adults across the 50 United States from 1983-2017, this paper finds that organized labor has two countervailing effects on occupations at greater risk of automation. First, higher union coverage within a state and industry inhibits the decline in earnings returns to an occupation’s RTI. Second, higher union coverage hastens the decline in employment shares of occupations with higher RTI. The result is that occupations at greater risk of automation experience more favorable earnings growth where unions are more resilient, but at the cost of accelerated declines in their employment shares. Counterfactual analyses demonstrate that if union coverage in the U.S. had remained stable at 1983 levels, the earnings returns to an occupation’s RTI might not have declined from 1983-2017, and the observed pattern of occupational earnings polarization in the 1990s might not have occurred. However, the mean RTI of occupations might have declined by an additional 21 percent from 1983-2017 relative to the observed decline. The findings suggest that the social consequences of automation are conditional on the strength of organized labor.
Center for Open Science
Title: Automation, Occupational Earnings Trends, and the Moderating Role of Organized Labor
Description:
Routine-biased technological change has emerged as the dominant explanation for the differential earnings growth of occupations at greater risk of automation, such as machine operators or office clerks, relative to less routine occupations.
In contrast, this paper finds that the declining earnings returns to an occupation’s routine task intensity (RTI) can largely be attributed to the decline of organized labor.
Using individual-level data on 3.
3 million employed adults across the 50 United States from 1983-2017, this paper finds that organized labor has two countervailing effects on occupations at greater risk of automation.
First, higher union coverage within a state and industry inhibits the decline in earnings returns to an occupation’s RTI.
Second, higher union coverage hastens the decline in employment shares of occupations with higher RTI.
The result is that occupations at greater risk of automation experience more favorable earnings growth where unions are more resilient, but at the cost of accelerated declines in their employment shares.
Counterfactual analyses demonstrate that if union coverage in the U.
S.
had remained stable at 1983 levels, the earnings returns to an occupation’s RTI might not have declined from 1983-2017, and the observed pattern of occupational earnings polarization in the 1990s might not have occurred.
However, the mean RTI of occupations might have declined by an additional 21 percent from 1983-2017 relative to the observed decline.
The findings suggest that the social consequences of automation are conditional on the strength of organized labor.

Related Results

Cometary Physics Laboratory: spectrophotometric experiments
Cometary Physics Laboratory: spectrophotometric experiments
<p><strong><span dir="ltr" role="presentation">1. Introduction</span></strong&...
EARNINGS MANAGEMENT AND FUTURE EARNINGS
EARNINGS MANAGEMENT AND FUTURE EARNINGS
Abstract This research is aimed to examine the moderating effect of the cost of earnings management on the relationship between earnings management and future earnings. Research ...
The Association between Earnings and Returns: A Comparative Study between the Chinese and US S tock Markets
The Association between Earnings and Returns: A Comparative Study between the Chinese and US S tock Markets
Abstract This study examines the earnings-return relation in the Chinese and US stock markets. We first examine whether the value relevance of earnings in the US sto...
Assessment of Earnings Conservatism in Malaysian Financial Reporting
Assessment of Earnings Conservatism in Malaysian Financial Reporting
<p><b>This study examines four influences on earnings conservatism of financial reporting in Malaysia. The study employs a sample of 3,126 firm-year observations of Mal...
Abnormal audit fees and accrual and real earnings management: evidence from UK
Abnormal audit fees and accrual and real earnings management: evidence from UK
Purpose This paper aims to examine the relationship between abnormal audit fees and accrual-based and real-based earnings management by using a sample of 1,055 UK...
PENGARUH UKURAN PERUSAHAAN DAN LEVERAGE TERHADAP EXPECTED EARNINGS DENGAN MANAJEMEN LABA SEBAGAI VARIABEL INTERVENING
PENGARUH UKURAN PERUSAHAAN DAN LEVERAGE TERHADAP EXPECTED EARNINGS DENGAN MANAJEMEN LABA SEBAGAI VARIABEL INTERVENING
Abstract   The objective of this study is to examine the influence of company size and leverage on expected earnings with earnings management as intervening variable. The populat...
Earnings management, financial performance and the moderating effect of corporate social responsibility: evidence from France
Earnings management, financial performance and the moderating effect of corporate social responsibility: evidence from France
Purpose The purpose of this paper is to examine the impact of earnings management on financial performance. In addition, the authors investigate whether corporate social responsibi...

Back to Top