2020
DOI: 10.1177/0143831x20931936
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Occupational mobility, employment transitions and job quality in Europe: The impact of the Great Recession

Abstract: This article investigates employment and occupational transitions that are behind structural changes in European labour markets before, during and after the Great Recession. The study introduces a new methodological approach for studying labour market flows considering the quality of the jobs from and into which the flows are taking place by differentiating them into wage quintiles. The analysis compares six European countries that are usually associated with different institutional clusters – France, Italy, P… Show more

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Cited by 11 publications
(12 citation statements)
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“…The results concerning unemployment show how the probability of being unemployed was higher during the crisis than before it and that, after the crisis, it was even higher than during the crisis for almost all groups. These results confirm our hypothesis (H3) regarding an increased likelihood of unemployment for both natives and migrants during and after the crisis compared to the before-crisis period and a decreased likelihood for both natives and migrants of belonging to a middle socio-occupational class (“job polarisation”), confirming the results of previous research (Bisello et al, 2020 ). The destruction of employment in the middle socio-occupational classes seems to have corresponded to a downgrade of the working conditions of many workers.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 92%
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“…The results concerning unemployment show how the probability of being unemployed was higher during the crisis than before it and that, after the crisis, it was even higher than during the crisis for almost all groups. These results confirm our hypothesis (H3) regarding an increased likelihood of unemployment for both natives and migrants during and after the crisis compared to the before-crisis period and a decreased likelihood for both natives and migrants of belonging to a middle socio-occupational class (“job polarisation”), confirming the results of previous research (Bisello et al, 2020 ). The destruction of employment in the middle socio-occupational classes seems to have corresponded to a downgrade of the working conditions of many workers.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 92%
“…All these results confirm a tendency towards an increased job polarisation due to the Great Recession, i.e. the decline of mid-paid jobs with respect to jobs at the top and bottom of the labour market structure (Fernández-Macías & Hurley, 2017), which was already found by previous research (Bisello et al, 2020;Fellini, 2017). Our longer observational window highlights how this tendency seems to continue also in the post-crisis period.…”
Section: Evolution Over Time: Migrants In the Spanish Labour Market B...supporting
confidence: 88%
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