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Marginal Workers, Marginal Jobs
246 pages, 6 x 9
Paperback
Release Date:01 Jul 1978
ISBN:9780292750555
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Marginal Workers, Marginal Jobs

The Underutilization of American Workers

University of Texas Press

Unemployment levels have received a great deal of attention and discussion in recent years. However, another labor category—underemployment—has virtually been ignored. Underutilized or underemployed workers are those who are experiencing inadequate hours of work, insufficient levels of income, and mismatch of occupation and skills. Marginal Workers, Marginal Jobs addresses two principal issues: how can we measure underemployment, and how can we explain its prevalence?

To answer the first question, Teresa Sullivan examines yardsticks in use, demonstrates their inadequacy, and develops a different measure that is easy to interpret and is usable by both demographers and economists. In answering the second, she analyzes 1960 and 1970 census data to determine the relative effects of population composition and job structure on levels of employment.

One of the important contributions of Sullivan's study is to distinguish between marginal workers and marginal jobs in explaining underutilization. Previous explanations, including the widely used dual market theory, have not stressed this analytic distinction. In addition, her work accounts separately for the various types of marginality and seeks to show the condition of workers who are marginal on more than one count—for example, those who are both young and black, or old and female.

A provocative study based on large samples of the U.S. population, this book raises important questions about a critical subject and makes a significant contribution to the theory of underutilization.

Teresa A. Sullivan is Professor Emeritus of Sociology at the University of Texas at Austin.
  • Foreword
  • Preface
  • 1. Approaching Labor Underutilization and Labor Marginality
  • 2. Who Are the Marginal Workers?
  • 3. How Do You Measure Underutilization?
  • 4. Data, Methods, and Time Effects
  • 5. The Idiosyncrasy Hypothesis: Employment of the Disabled
  • 6. The Discrimination Hypothesis: Age
  • 7. The Discrimination Hypothesis: Race and Sex
  • 8. The Discrimination Hypothesis: Interactions
  • 9. The Achievement Hypothesis: Effects of Training
  • 10. The Structural Hypothesis: Marginal Jobs
  • 11. Conclusions and Recommendations
  • Appendices
    • A. Data Adequacy and Methods
    • B. Measuring Involuntary Part-time Employment
    • C. Measuring Underutilization by Level of Income
    • D. Measuring Mismatch
  • Notes
  • Bibliography
  • Index
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