Peter B. Doeringer Department of Economics, Boston University IILS Round Table on The Global Job...

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Myths and Realities: Structural Change in

U.S. Labor Markets and the Great Recession

Peter B. DoeringerDepartment of Economics, Boston University

IILS Round Table on The Global Job Crisis: Emerging PerspectivesInternational Labour Office, Geneva, 22 February 2013

I am grateful to the Economic Policy Institute for making a number of graphics available from The State of Working America (12th Edition)

2

Symptoms of the Great Recession

Myth or Reality During the Great Recession

Public Policies and Priorities

3

Symptoms of the Great Recession

4

Unusual Job Losses

5

Unemployed Workers and Job Openings, By Industry, 2011 (in millions)

6

Long-term Unemployment, 1948–2011

38.1% January 2013

7

Myth or Reality During the Great Recession?

A university degree is no longer worth the investment

Women fared better than men in the recession

Good jobs have disappeared

Private welfare benefits are surviving; social safety nets have failed

8

A University Degree Is No Longer Worth the Investment

9

Pre-Recession College Earnings Advantage: Male Workers

200500800

110014001700200023002600

18 25 32 39 46 53 60

Wee

kly

Earn

ings

Age

Men

Some college

College Graduates

High school graduatesHigh school dropouts

10

Unemployment Rates Rising for College Graduates During the Recession

11

Entry-level Real Wages of College Graduates Falling Since 2002

12

Entry-level Real Wages of High School Graduates Falling Since 2001

13

College Wage Premiums Are Still Rising

14

Women Fared Better Than Men in the Recession

15

Unemployment Rates by Gender, 2000-2012

2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 20120

2

4

6

8

10

12

Male 16+Female 16+

16

Job Loss by Gender In the Great Recession (Dec. 2007–Dec. 2011)

17

Cumulative Change In Real Hourly Wages of

Women, by Wage Percentile, 1979–2011

18

Cumulative Change in Real Hourly Wages of Men, by Wage Percentile,

1979–2011

19

The Gender Wage Gap Continues to Narrow

1939 = 62%

1959 = 45%

1979 = 38%

1999 = 24%

2007 = 18%

2011 = 16%

20

Good Jobs Have Disappeared

21

Long-Duration Jobs (1983, 2008)Years with Current Employer

(wage & salary workers age 20+)

1983 200820+ years 9% 11%10+ years 27% 28%2 Years or Less 37% 34%

10+ Years, age 45-49 -- Men 58% 44% -- Women 33% 37%10+ Years, age 55-59 -- Men 66% 55% -- Women 51% 50%

22

“Good” Jobs As a Share of Total Employment, 1979–2010

[Schmitt and Jones, CEPR, 2012 ]

23

% Change in Employment Shares by Type of Job Duties, 1981-2011

[Jaimovich and Siu, The Trend is the Cycle, NBER Working Paper 18334, May 2012]

24

Private Welfare Benefits Are Surviving; Social Safety Nets Have Failed

25

Share of Recent College Graduates With Employer Health/Pension Coverage, 1979–2010

26

Share of Recent High School Graduates with Employer Health & Pension Coverage, 1979–2010

27

Share of Unemployed Receiving Unemployment Insurance Benefits, 1989-2011

28

Per Capita Social Security Expenditures and the Elderly Poverty Rate, 1959–2011

Public Policy?

Priorities: More jobs, less chronic unemployment, better jobs, less labor market polarization

Active Policies Better job matching Education and training Regional economic development and labor mobility Work-based transitions: School-to-work, Re-employment

Labor Market Regulation Minimum wages and employment standards Unions and collective bargaining policy Anti-discrimination policies Immigration policy Public sector employment and HR reforms

Full Employment 29

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