Publication: Technology and the Task Content of Jobs Across the Development Spectrum
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Date
2023-07-03
ISSN
0258-6770 (print)
1564-698X (online)
1564-698X (online)
Published
2023-07-03
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Abstract
The tasks workers perform on the job are informative about the direction and the impact of technological change. We harmonize occupational task-content measures between two worker-level surveys, which separately cover developing and developed countries. Developing countries use routine-cognitive tasks and routine-manual tasks more intensively than developed countries, but less intensively use non-routine analytical tasks and nonroutine interpersonal tasks. This is partly because developing countries have more workers in occupations with high routine content and fewer workers in occupations with high non-routine content. More importantly, a given occupation has more routine content and less non-routine content in developing countries than in developed countries. Since 2006, occupations with high non-routine content gained employment relative to those with high routine content in most countries, regardless of their income level or initial task intensity, indicating the global reaches of the technological change that reduces the demand for occupations with high routine content.
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“Caunedo, Julieta; Keller, Elisa; Shin, Yongseok. 2023. Technology and the Task Content of Jobs Across the Development Spectrum. World Bank Economic Review. © World Bank. http://hdl.handle.net/10986/41283 License: CC BY-NC-ND 3.0 IGO.”
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World Bank Economic Review
1564-698X
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