Emergence of the Austrian Labor Market: A Historical Perspective on Recruitment Channels and Newspaper Job Advertisements
Joern Kleinert () and
Wiltrud Moelzer ()
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Joern Kleinert: University of Graz, Austria
Wiltrud Moelzer: University of Graz, Austria
No 2026-12, Graz Economics Papers from University of Graz, Department of Economics
Abstract:
This paper traces the emergence of the Austrian labor market from the mid-19th century to the interwar period. In the last two centuries, the growing division of labor required increasingly complex mechanisms to match dispersed skills and knowledge with productive tasks. We study labor markets as institutions that facilitate this matching in a decentralized manner. The first part of the paper situates this development historically by examining how different recruitment channels emerged and interacted. Rather than replacing each other linearly, these channels coexisted, competed, and evolved in response to new demands, constraints, and social preferences. Together, they shaped how people searched for or offered work, how information circulated, and how employment relationships were formed. The second part looks at one such channel using newspaper job ads. Drawing on two hand-collected random samples from 1870 and 1927, we document how advertised jobs mirror broader structural and economic changes. These samples are extracted from 29 digitalized Germanlanguage newspapers containing job ads from 1850 to 1950. Our findings reveal an increasing specialization and formalization of employment relationships and demonstrate the potential of historical job ads as a novel empirical basis and unfiltered source for studying labor markets.
Keywords: History of labor markets; labor market matching; vacancy; qualification requirement; labor market institutions (search for similar items in EconPapers)
JEL-codes: J21 J64 N33 N34 (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2026-07
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