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Job Attributes and Occupational Changes: A Shift-Share Decomposition by Gender and Age Group for Canada, 2006–2016

Mikhael Deutsch-Heng, Benoit Dostie and Genevieve Dufour

Canadian Public Policy, 2023, vol. 49, issue 2, 162-179

Abstract: Technological change has two first-order effects on the nature of work. First, new technologies can cause changes within workers' occupations, and second, it can push workers to move between occupations. To quantify these effects, we match detailed occupational data from the 2006 and 2016 Canadian censuses to detailed data that associates each occupation with sets of tasks, activities, and skills required for that occupation. Our results show that the importance of attributes related to social interactions and non-routine cognitive tasks has increased significantly. Moreover, most of the increase occurred within narrowly defined occupations. Men were more affected by the observed changes than women.

Keywords: skills; tasks; occupational change; technological change; O NET; census (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2023
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