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Employment
View on WikipediaEmployment is a relationship between two parties regulating the provision of paid labour services. Usually based on a contract, one party, the employer, which might be a corporation, a not-for-profit organization, a co-operative, or any other entity, pays the other, the employee, in return for carrying out assigned work.[1] Employees work in return for wages, which can be paid on the basis of an hourly rate, by piecework or an annual salary, depending on the type of work an employee does, the prevailing conditions of the sector and the bargaining power between the parties. Employees in some sectors may receive gratuities, bonus payments or stock options. In some types of employment, employees may receive benefits in addition to payment. Benefits may include health insurance, housing, and disability insurance. Employment is typically governed by employment laws, organization or legal contracts.
Employees and employers
[edit]An employee contributes labour and expertise to an endeavor of an employer or of a person conducting a business or undertaking (PCB)[2] and is usually hired to perform specific duties which are packaged into a job. In a corporate context, an employee is a person who is hired to provide services to a company on a regular basis in exchange for compensation and who does not provide these services as part of an independent business.[3]
Employers include individuals who engage businesses or self-employed persons for trade work as well as businesses who may have significant numbers of employees. Some states require employers to make contributions towards social security and pension schemes.[4] Employing other people is often a significant step for a self-employed person whose work is developing into a small business.[5]
Independent contractor
[edit]An issue that arises in most companies, especially the ones that are in the gig economy, is the classification of workers. A lot of workers that fulfill gigs are often hired as independent contractors.
To categorize a worker as an independent contractor rather than an employee, an independent contractor must agree with the client on what the finished work product will be and then the contractor controls the means and manner of achieving the desired outcome. Secondly, an independent contractor offers services to the public at large, not just to one business, and is responsible for disbursing payments from the client, paying unreimbursed expenses, and providing his or her own tools to complete the job. Third, the relationship of the parties is often evidenced by a written agreement that specifies that the worker is an independent contractor and is not entitled to employee benefits; the services provided by the worker are not key to the business; and the relationship is not permanent.[6]
As a general principle of employment law, in the United States, there is a difference between an agent and an independent contractor. The default status of a worker is an employee unless specific guidelines are met, which can be determined by the ABC test.[7][8] Thus, clarifying whether someone who performs work is an independent contractor or an employee from the beginning, and treating them accordingly, can save a company from trouble later on.
Provided key circumstances, including ones such as that the worker is paid regularly, follows set hours of work, is supplied with tools from the employer, is closely monitored by the employer, acting on behalf of the employer, only works for one employer at a time, they are considered an employee,[9] and the employer will generally be liable for their actions and be obliged to give them benefits.[10] Similarly, the employer is the owner of any invention created by an employee "hired to invent", even in the absence of an assignment of inventions. In contrast, a company commissioning a work by an independent contractor will not own the copyright unless the company secures either a written contract stating that it is a "work made for hire" or a written assignment of the copyright. In order to stay protected and avoid lawsuits, an employer has to be aware of that distinction.[6]
Employer–worker relationship
[edit]Employer and managerial control within an organization rests at many levels and has important implications for staff and productivity alike, with control forming the fundamental link between desired outcomes and actual processes. Employers must balance interests such as decreasing wage constraints with a maximization of labor productivity in order to achieve a profitable and productive employment relationship.
Labor acquisition / hiring
[edit]The main ways for employers to find workers and for people to find employers are via jobs listings in newspapers (via classified advertising) and online, also called job boards. Employers and job seekers also often find each other via professional recruitment consultants which receive a commission from the employer to find, screen and select suitable candidates. However, a study has shown that such consultants may not be reliable when they fail to use established principles in selecting employees.[1] A more traditional approach is with a "Help Wanted" sign in the establishment (usually hung on a window or door[11] or placed on a store counter).[3] Evaluating different employees can be quite laborious but setting up different techniques to analyze their skills to measure their talents within the field can be best through assessments. Employer and potential employee commonly take the additional step of getting to know each other through the process of a job interview.
Training and development
[edit]
Training and development refers to the employer's effort to equip a newly hired employee with the necessary skills to perform at the job, and to help the employee grow within the organization. An appropriate level of training and development helps to improve employee's job satisfaction.[12]
Remuneration
[edit]There are many ways that employees are paid, including by hourly wages, by piecework, by yearly salary, or by gratuities (with the latter often being combined with another form of payment). In sales jobs and real estate positions, the employee may be paid a commission, a percentage of the value of the goods or services that they have sold. In some fields and professions (e.g., executive jobs), employees may be eligible for a bonus if they meet certain targets. Some executives and employees may be paid in shares or stock options, a compensation approach that has the added benefit, from the company's point of view, of helping to align the interests of the compensated individual with the performance of the company.
Under the faithless servant doctrine, a doctrine under the laws of a number of states in the United States, and most notably New York State law, an employee who acts unfaithfully towards his employer must forfeit all of the compensation he received during the period of his disloyalty.[13][14][15][16][17]
Employee benefits
[edit]Employee benefits are various non-wage compensation provided to employees in addition to their wages or salaries. The benefits can include: housing (employer-provided or employer-paid), group insurance (health, dental, life etc.), disability income protection, retirement benefits, daycare, tuition reimbursement, sick leave, vacation (paid and non-paid), social security, profit sharing, funding of education, and other specialized benefits. In some cases, such as with workers employed in remote or isolated regions, the benefits may include meals. Employee benefits can improve the relationship between employee and employer and lowers staff turnover.[18]
Organizational justice
[edit]Organizational justice is an employee's perception and judgement of employer's treatment in the context of fairness or justice. The resulting actions to influence the employee-employer relationship is also a part of organizational justice.[18]
Workforce organizing
[edit]Employees can organize into trade or labor unions, which represent the workforce to collectively bargain with the management of organizations about working, and contractual conditions and services.[19]
Ending employment
[edit]Usually, either an employee or employer may end the relationship at any time, often subject to a certain notice period. This is referred to as at-will employment. The contract between the two parties specifies the responsibilities of each when ending the relationship and may include requirements such as notice periods, severance pay, and security measures.[19] A contract forbidding an employee from leaving their employment, under penalty of a surety bond, is referred to as an employment bond. In some professions, notably teaching, civil servants, university professors, and some orchestra jobs, some employees may have tenure, which means that they cannot be dismissed at will. Another type of termination is a layoff.
Wage labor
[edit]
Wage labor is the socioeconomic relationship between a worker and an employer, where the worker sells their labor under a formal or informal employment contract. These transactions usually occur in a labor market where wages are market-determined.[12][18] In exchange for the wages paid, the work product generally becomes the undifferentiated property of the employer, except for special cases such as the vesting of intellectual property patents in the United States where patent rights are usually vested in the original personal inventor. A wage laborer is a person whose primary means of income is from the selling of his or her labor in this way.[19]
In modern mixed economies such as that of the OECD countries, it is currently the dominant form of work arrangement. Although most work occurs following this structure, the wage work arrangements of CEOs, professional employees, and professional contract workers are sometimes conflated with class assignments, so that "wage labor" is considered to apply only to unskilled, semi-skilled or manual labor.[20]
Wage slavery
[edit]Wage labor, as institutionalized under today's market economic systems, has been criticized,[19] especially by socialists,[20][21][22][23] using the pejorative term wage slavery.[24][25] Socialists draw parallels between the trade of labor as a commodity and slavery. Cicero is also known to have suggested such parallels.[26]
The American philosopher John Dewey posited that until "industrial feudalism" is replaced by "industrial democracy", politics will be "the shadow cast on society by big business".[27] Thomas Ferguson has postulated in his investment theory of party competition that the undemocratic nature of economic institutions under capitalism causes elections to become occasions when blocs of investors coalesce and compete to control the state plus cities.[28]
American business theorist Jeffrey Pfeffer posits that contemporary employment practices and employer commonalities in the United States, including toxic working environments, job insecurity, long hours and increased performance pressure from management, are responsible for 120,000 excess deaths annually, making the workplace the fifth leading cause of death in the United States.[29][30]
Employment contract
[edit]Australia
[edit]Australian employment has been governed by the Fair Work Act since 2009.[31]
Bangladesh
[edit]Bangladesh Association of International Recruiting Agencies (BAIRA) is an association of national level with its international reputation of co-operation and welfare of the migrant workforce as well as its approximately 1200 members agencies in collaboration with and support from the Government of Bangladesh.[20]
Canada
[edit]In the Canadian province of Ontario, formal complaints can be brought to the Ministry of Labour. In the province of Quebec, grievances can be filed with the Commission des normes du travail.[23]
Germany
[edit]Two of the prominent examples of work and employment contracts in Germany are the Werksvertrag[32][33] or the Arbeitsvertrag,[34][35][36][37] which is a form of Dienstleistungsvertrag (service-oriented contract). An Arbeitsvertrag can also be temporary,[38] whereas a temporary worker is working under Zeitarbeit[39] or Leiharbeit.[40] Another employment setting is Arbeitnehmerüberlassung (ANÜ).[41][42][43]
India
[edit]India has options for a fixed term contract or a permanent contract. Both contracts are entitled to minimum wages, fixed working hours and social security contributions.[23]
Pakistan
[edit]Pakistan has no contract Labor, Minimum Wage and Provident Funds Acts. Contract labor in Pakistan must be paid minimum wage and certain facilities are to be provided to labor. However, the Acts are not yet fully implemented.[20]
Philippines
[edit]In the Philippines, employment is regulated by the Department of Labor and Employment.[44]
Sweden
[edit]According to Swedish law,[45] there are three types of employment.
- Test employment (Swedish: Provanställning), where the employer hires a person for a test period of 6 months maximum. The employment can be ended at any time without giving any reason. This type of employment can be offered only once per employer and in employee combination. Usually, a time limited or normal employment is offered after a test employment.[46]
- Time limited employment (Swedish: Tidsbegränsad anställning). The employer hires a person for a specified time. Usually, they are extended for a new period. Total maximum two years per employer and employee combination, then it automatically counts as a normal employment.
- Normal employment (Swedish: Tillsvidareanställning / Fast anställning), which has no time limit (except for retirement etc.). It can still be ended for two reasons: personal reason, immediate end of employment only for strong reasons such as crime, or lack of work tasks (Swedish: Arbetsbrist), cancellation of employment, usually because of bad income for the company. There is a cancellation period of 1–6 months, and rules for how to select employees, basically those with shortest employment time shall be cancelled first.[46]
There are no laws about minimum salary in Sweden. Instead, there are agreements between employer organizations and trade unions about minimum salaries, and other employment conditions.
There is a type of employment contract which is common but not regulated in law, and that is Hour employment (Swedish: Timanställning), which can be Normal employment (unlimited), but the work time is unregulated and decided per immediate need basis. The employee is expected to be answering the phone and come to work when needed, e.g. when someone is ill and absent from work. They will receive salary only for actual work time and can in reality be fired for no reason by not being called anymore. This type of contract is common in the public sector.[46]
United Kingdom
[edit]In the United Kingdom, employment contracts are categorized by the government into the following types:[47]
- Fixed-term contract: last for a certain length of time, are set in advance, end when a specific task is completed, ends when a specific event takes place.
- Full-time or part-time contract: has no defined length of time, can be terminated by either party, is to accomplish a specific task, specified number of hours.[44]
- Agency staff
- Freelancers, Consultants and Contractors
- Zero-hour contracts
United States
[edit]
For purposes of U.S. federal income tax withholding, 26 U.S.C. § 3401(c) provides a definition for the term "employee" specific to chapter 24 of the Internal Revenue Code:

"For purposes of this chapter, the term "employee" includes an officer, employee, or elected official of the United States, a State, or any political subdivision thereof, or the District of Columbia, or any agency or instrumentality of any one or more of the foregoing. The term "employee" also includes an officer of a corporation."[48] This definition does not exclude all those who are commonly known as 'employees'. "Similarly, Latham's instruction which indicated that under 26 U.S.C. § 3401(c) the category of 'employee' does not include privately employed wage earners is a preposterous reading of the statute. It is obvious that within the context of both statutes the word 'includes' is a term of enlargement not of limitation, and the reference to certain entities or categories is not intended to exclude all others."[49]
Employees are often contrasted with independent contractors, especially when there is dispute as to the worker's entitlement to have matching taxes paid, workers compensation, and unemployment insurance benefits. However, in September 2009, the court case of Brown v. J. Kaz, Inc. ruled that independent contractors are regarded as employees for the purpose of discrimination laws if they work for the employer on a regular basis, and said employer directs the time, place, and manner of employment.[44]
In non-union work environments, in the United States, unjust termination complaints can be brought to the United States Department of Labor.[50]
Labor unions are legally recognized as representatives of workers in many industries in the United States. Their activity today centers on collective bargaining over wages, benefits, and working conditions for their membership, and on representing their members in disputes with management over violations of contract provisions. Larger unions also typically engage in lobbying activities and electioneering at the state and federal level.[44]
Most unions in America are aligned with one of two larger umbrella organizations: the AFL–CIO created in 1955, and the Change to Win Federation which split from the AFL–CIO in 2005. Both advocate policies and legislation on behalf of workers in the United States and Canada, and take an active role in politics. The AFL–CIO is especially concerned with global trade issues.[28]
Age-related issues
[edit]Younger age workers
[edit]
Young workers are at higher risk for occupational injury and face certain occupational hazards at a higher rate; this is generally due to their employment in high-risk industries. For example, in the United States, young people are injured at work at twice the rate of their older counterparts.[52] These workers are also at higher risk for motor vehicle accidents at work, due to less work experience, a lower use of seat belts, and higher rates of distracted driving.[53][54] To mitigate this risk, those under the age of 17 are restricted from certain types of driving, including transporting people and goods under certain circumstances.[53]
High-risk industries for young workers include agriculture, restaurants, waste management, and mining.[52][53] In the United States, those under the age of 18 are restricted from certain jobs that are deemed dangerous under the Fair Labor Standards Act.[53]
Youth employment programs are most effective when they include both theoretical classroom training and hands-on training with work placements.[55]
In the conversation of employment among younger aged workers, youth unemployment has also been monitored. Youth unemployment rates tend to be higher than the adult rates in every country in the world.[56]
Older age workers
[edit]Those older than the statutory defined retirement age may continue to work, either out of enjoyment or necessity. However, depending on the nature of the job, older workers may need to transition into less-physical forms of work to avoid injury. Working past retirement age also has positive effects, because it gives a sense of purpose and allows people to maintain social networks and activity levels.[57] Older workers are often found to be discriminated against by employers.[58]
Working poor
[edit]
Employment is no guarantee of escaping poverty, the International Labour Organization (ILO) estimates that as many as 40% of workers are poor, not earning enough to keep their families above the $2 a day poverty line.[46] For instance, in India most of the chronically poor are wage earners in formal employment, because their jobs are insecure and low paid and offer no chance to accumulate wealth to avoid risks.[46] According to the UNRISD, increasing labor productivity appears to have a negative impact on job creation: in the 1960s, a 1% increase in output per worker was associated with a reduction in employment growth of 0.07%, by the first decade of this century the same productivity increase implies reduced employment growth by 0.54%.[46] Both increased employment opportunities and increased labor productivity (as long as it also translates into higher wages) are needed to tackle poverty. Increases in employment without increases in productivity leads to a rise in the number of "working poor", which is why some experts are now promoting the creation of "quality" and not "quantity" in labor market policies.[46] This approach does highlight how higher productivity has helped reduce poverty in East Asia, but the negative impact is beginning to show.[46] In Vietnam, for example, employment growth has slowed while productivity growth has continued.[46] Furthermore, productivity increases do not always lead to increased wages, as can be seen in the United States, where the gap between productivity and wages has been rising since the 1980s.[46] Oxfam and social scientist Mark Robert Rank have argued that the economy of the United States is failing to provide jobs that can adequately support families.[59][60] According to sociologist Matthew Desmond, the US "offers some of the lowest wages in the industrialized world," which has "swelled the ranks of the working poor, most of whom are thirty-five or older."[61]
Researchers at the Overseas Development Institute argue that there are differences across economic sectors in creating employment that reduces poverty.[46] 24 instances of growth were examined, in which 18 reduced poverty. This study showed that other sectors were just as important in reducing unemployment, such as manufacturing.[46] The services sector is most effective at translating productivity growth into employment growth. Agriculture provides a safety net for jobs and economic buffer when other sectors are struggling.[46]
| Growth, employment and poverty[46] | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Number of episodes |
Rising agricultural employment |
Rising industrial employment |
Rising services employment | |
| Growth episodes associated with falling poverty rates | 18 |
6 |
10 |
15
|
| Growth episodes associated with no fall in poverty rates | 6 |
2 |
3 |
1
|
Models of the employment relationship
[edit]Scholars conceptualize the employment relationship in various ways.[62] A key assumption is the extent to which the employment relationship necessarily includes conflicts of interests between employers and employees, and the form of such conflicts.[63] In economic theorizing, the labor market mediates all such conflicts such that employers and employees who enter into an employment relationship are assumed to find this arrangement in their own self-interest. In human resource management theorizing, employers and employees are assumed to have shared interests (or a unity of interests, hence the label "unitarism"). Any conflicts that exist are seen as a manifestation of poor human resource management policies or interpersonal clashes such as personality conflicts, both of which can and should be managed away. From the perspective of pluralist industrial relations, the employment relationship is characterized by a plurality of stakeholders with legitimate interests (hence the label "pluralism), and some conflicts of interests are seen as inherent in the employment relationship (e.g., wages v. profits). Lastly, the critical paradigm emphasizes antagonistic conflicts of interests between various groups (e.g., the competing capitalist and working classes in a Marxist framework) that are part of a deeper social conflict of unequal power relations. As a result, there are four common models of employment:[64]
- Mainstream economics: employment is seen as a mutually advantageous transaction in a free market between self-interested legal and economic equals
- Human resource management (unitarism): employment is a long-term partnership of employees and employers with common interests
- Pluralist industrial relations: employment is a bargained exchange between stakeholders with some common and some competing economic interests and unequal bargaining power due to imperfect labor markets[46]
- Critical industrial relations: employment is an unequal power relation between competing groups that is embedded in and inseparable from systemic inequalities throughout the socio-politico-economic system.
These models are important because they help reveal why individuals hold differing perspectives on human resource management policies, labor unions, and employment regulation.[65] For example, human resource management policies are seen as dictated by the market in the first view, as essential mechanisms for aligning the interests of employees and employers and thereby creating profitable companies in the second view, as insufficient for looking out for workers' interests in the third view, and as manipulative managerial tools for shaping the ideology and structure of the workplace in the fourth view.[66]
Academic literature
[edit]Literature on the employment impact of economic growth and on how growth is associated with employment at a macro, sector and industry level was aggregated in 2013.[67]
Researchers found evidence to suggest growth in manufacturing and services have good impact on employment. They found GDP growth on employment in agriculture to be limited, but that value-added growth had a relatively larger impact.[46] The impact on job creation by industries/economic activities as well as the extent of the body of evidence and the key studies. For extractives, they again found extensive evidence suggesting growth in the sector has limited impact on employment. In textiles, however, although evidence was low, studies suggest growth there positively contributed to job creation. In agri-business and food processing, they found impact growth to be positive.[67]
They found that most available literature focuses on OECD and middle-income countries somewhat, where economic growth impact has been shown to be positive on employment. The researchers didn't find sufficient evidence to conclude any impact of growth on employment in LDCs despite some pointing to the positive impact, others point to limitations. They recommended that complementary policies are necessary to ensure economic growth's positive impact on LDC employment. With trade, industry and investment, they only found limited evidence of positive impact on employment from industrial and investment policies and for others, while large bodies of evidence does exist, the exact impact remains contested.[67]
Researchers have also explored the relationship between employment and illicit activities. Using evidence from Africa, a research team found that a program for Liberian ex-fighters reduced work hours on illicit activities. The employment program also reduced interest in mercenary work in nearby wars. The study concludes that while the use of capital inputs or cash payments for peaceful work created a reduction in illicit activities, the impact of training alone is rather low.[68]
Globalization and employment relations
[edit]The balance of economic efficiency and social equity is the ultimate debate in the field of employment relations.[69] By meeting the needs of the employer; generating profits to establish and maintain economic efficiency; whilst maintaining a balance with the employee and creating social equity that benefits the worker so that he/she can fund and enjoy healthy living; proves to be a continuous revolving issue in westernized societies.[69]
Globalization has affected these issues by creating certain economic factors that disallow or allow various employment issues. Economist Edward Lee (1996) studies the effects of globalization and summarizes the four major points of concern that affect employment relations:
- International competition, from the newly industrialized countries, will cause unemployment growth and increased wage disparity for unskilled workers in industrialized countries. Imports from low-wage countries exert pressure on the manufacturing sector in industrialized countries and foreign direct investment (FDI) is attracted away from the industrialized nations, towards low-waged countries.[69]
- Economic liberalization will result in unemployment and wage inequality in developing countries. This happens as job losses in uncompetitive industries outstrip job opportunities in new industries.
- Workers will be forced to accept worsening wages and conditions, as a global labor market results in a "race to the bottom". Increased international competition creates a pressure to reduce the wages and conditions of workers.[69]
- Globalization reduces the autonomy of the nation state. Capital is increasingly mobile and the ability of the state to regulate economic activity is reduced.
What also results from Lee's (1996) findings is that in industrialized countries an average of almost 70 per cent of workers are employed in the service sector, most of which consists of non-tradable activities. As a result, workers are forced to become more skilled and develop sought after trades, or find other means of survival. Ultimately this is a result of changes and trends of employment, an evolving workforce, and globalization that is represented by a more skilled and increasing highly diverse labor force, that are growing in non standard forms of employment (Markey, R. et al. 2006).[69]
Alternatives
[edit]Subcultures
[edit]Various youth subcultures have been associated with not working, such as the hippie subculture in the 1960s and 1970s (which endorsed the idea of "dropping out" of society) and the punk subculture.
Post-secondary education
[edit]One of the alternatives to work is engaging in post-secondary education at a college, university or professional school. One of the major costs of obtaining a post-secondary education is the opportunity cost of forgone wages due to not working. At times when jobs are hard to find, such as during recessions, unemployed individuals may decide to get post-secondary education, because there is less of an opportunity cost.
Social assistance
[edit]In some countries, individuals who are not working can receive social assistance support (e.g., welfare or food stamps) to enable them to rent housing, buy food, repair or replace household goods, maintenance of children and observe social customs that require financial expenditure.
Volunteerism
[edit]Workers who are not paid wages, such as volunteers who perform tasks for charities, hospitals or not-for-profit organizations, are generally not considered employed. One exception to this is an internship, an employment situation in which the worker receives training or experience (and possibly college credit) as the chief form of compensation.[70]
Indentured servitude and slavery
[edit]Those who work under obligation for the purpose of fulfilling a debt, such as indentured servants, or as property of the person or entity they work for, such as slaves, do not receive pay for their services and are not considered employed. Some historians[which?] suggest that slavery is older than employment, but both arrangements have existed for all recorded history.[citation needed] Indentured servitude and slavery are not considered compatible with human rights or with democracy.[70]
Self-employment
[edit]Self-employment is the state of working for oneself rather than an employer. Tax authorities will generally view a person as self-employed if the person chooses to be recognised as such or if the person is generating income for which a tax return needs to be filed. In the real world, the critical issue for tax authorities is not whether a person is engaged in business activity (called trading even when referring to the provision of a service) but whether the activity is profitable and therefore potentially taxable. In other words, the trading is likely to be ignored if there is no profit, so occasional and hobby- or enthusiast-based economic activity is generally ignored by tax authorities. Self-employed people are usually classified as a sole proprietor (or sole trader), independent contractor, or as a member of a partnership.
Self-employed people generally find their own work rather than being provided with work by an employer and instead earn income from a profession, a trade, or a business that they operate. In some countries, such as the United States and the United Kingdom, the authorities are placing more emphasis on clarifying whether an individual is self-employed or engaged in disguised employment, in other words pretending to be in a contractual intra-business relationship to hide what is in fact an employer-employee relationship.Local employment
[edit]Local employment initiatives aim to ensure that residents of the area adjacent to an employers' premises are offered employment there. Local jobs initiatives are common in a construction context.[71] In retail, the Westfield Centre in west London, which opened in 2008, has been noted as an example offering employment to local residents: during the period when the centre was under construction, up to 3000 local people received pre-employment training through a partnership scheme aiming to ensure that a significant proportion of the centre's jobs were taken up by local people. 40% of the centre's management staff had been locally recruited at the time when the centre opened.[72]
Statistics
[edit]See also
[edit]- Alternative employment arrangements
- Automation
- Bullshit job
- Career-oriented social networking market
- Critique of work
- Domestic inquiry
- Employer branding
- Employer registration
- Employment fraud
- Employment gap
- Employment of autistic people
- Employment rate
- Employment website
- The End of Work
- Equal opportunity employment
- Equal pay for equal work
- Ethnic Penalty
- Green growth
- Job analysis
- Job description
- Job fraud
- Job guarantee
- Jobless recovery
- Labor economics
- Labor power
- Labor rights
- List of largest employers
- Lump of labor fallacy
- Onboarding
- Payroll
- Personnel selection
- Post-work society
- Protestant work ethic
- Refusal of work
- Reserve army of labor (Marxism)
- Salary inversion
- Staffing models
- Universal basic income
- Work ethic
- Work (human activity)
Notes and references
[edit]- ^ a b Dakin, Stephen; Armstrong, J. Scott (1989). "Predicting job performance: A comparison of expert opinion and research findings" (PDF). International Journal of Forecasting. 5 (2): 187–94. doi:10.1016/0169-2070(89)90086-1. S2CID 14567834.
- ^ Archer, Richard; Borthwick, Kerry; Travers, Michelle; Ruschena, Leo (2017). WHS: A Management Guide (4th ed.). Cengage Learning Australia. pp. 30–31. ISBN 978-0170270793. Retrieved 2016-03-30.
The most significant definitions are 'person conducting a business or undertaking' (PCBU). 'worker' and 'workplace'. [...] 'PCBU' is a wider ranging term than 'employer', though this will be what most people understand by it.
- ^ a b Ristau, Robert A. (2010). Intro to Business. Cengage Learning. p. 74. ISBN 978-0538740661.
- ^ UK Government, National Insurance rates and categories, accessed on 13 June 2025
- ^ UK Government, Get your business ready to employ staff: step by step, accessed on 13 June 2025
- ^ "ABC test". Legal Information Institute (LII). Retrieved 2022-10-06.
- ^ Dynamex Operations West, Inc. v. Superior Court, vol. 4, April 30, 2018, p. 903, retrieved March 30, 2020
- ^ "Overview of Independent Contractor Guidelines". Findlaw. Retrieved 2020-03-30.
- ^ "Employer Liability for Employee Conduct". Findlaw. Retrieved 2020-03-30.
- ^ Wainwright,J. Mayhew (1910). Report to the Legislature of the State of New York by the Commission appointed under Chapter 518 of the laws of 1909 to inquire into the question of employers' liability and other matters (Report). J. B. Lyon Company. pp. 11, 50, 144.
- ^ a b Deakin, Simon; Wilkinson, Frank (2005). The Law of the Labour Market (PDF). Oxford University Press.
- ^ Glynn, Timothy P.; Arnow-Richman, Rachel S.; Sullivan, Charles A. (2019). Employment Law: Private Ordering and Its Limitations. Wolters Kluwer Law & Business. ISBN 978-1543801064 – via Google Books.
- ^ Annual Institute on Employment Law. Vol. 2. Practising Law Institute. 2004 – via Google Books.
- ^ New York Jurisprudence 2d. Vol. 52. West Group. 2009 – via Google Books.
- ^ Labor Cases. Vol. 158. Commerce Clearing House. 2009 – via Google Books.
- ^ Kaufman, Ellie (May 19, 2018). "Met Opera sues former conductor for $5.8 million over sexual misconduct allegations". CNN.
- ^ a b c Marx, Karl (1847). "Chapter 2". Wage Labour and Capital.
- ^ a b c d Ellerman 1992.
- ^ a b c d Ostergaard 1997, p. 133.
- ^ Thompson 1966, p. 599.
- ^ Thompson 1966, p. 912.
- ^ a b c Lazonick, William (1990). Competitive Advantage on the Shop Floor. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press. p. 37. ISBN 978-0674154162.
- ^ "wage slave". merriam-webster.com. Retrieved 4 March 2013.
- ^ "wage slave". Dictionary.com Unabridged (Online). n.d.
- ^ "...vulgar are the means of livelihood of all hired workmen whom we pay for mere manual labour, not for artistic skill; for in their case the very wage they receive is a pledge of their slavery." – De Officiis [1]
- ^ "As long as politics is the shadow cast on society by big business, the attenuation of the shadow will not change the substance", in "The Need for a New Party" (1931), Later Works 6, p163
- ^ a b Ferguson 1995.
- ^ Pfeffer, Jeffrey (2018). Dying for a Paycheck: How Modern Management Harms Employee Health and Company Performance – and What We Can Do About It. HarperBusiness. p. 38. ISBN 978-0062800923.
- ^ McGregor, Jena (March 22, 2018). "This professor says the workplace is the fifth leading cause of death in the U.S." The Washington Post. Retrieved June 7, 2023.
- ^ "House of Reps seals 'death' of WorkChoices". ABC News. Australian Broadcasting Corporation. 2008-03-19. Archived from the original on April 29, 2008. Retrieved 2014-02-15.
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- ^ Stieglmeier, Jacqueline (2005), Hök, Götz-Sebastian (ed.), "Internationales Arbeitsrecht", Handbuch des internationalen und ausländischen Baurechts (in German), Berlin, Heidelberg: Springer, pp. 361–368, doi:10.1007/3-540-27450-2_24, ISBN 978-3540274506, retrieved 2021-04-11
- ^ "AÜG – nichtamtliches Inhaltsverzeichnis". www.gesetze-im-internet.de. Retrieved 2021-04-11.
- ^ a b c d "Brown v. J. Kaz, Inc., No. 08-2713 (3d Cir. Sept. 11, 2009)". Archived from the original on 2012-03-23. Retrieved 2010-01-23.
- ^ Lag om anställningsskydd (1982:80)
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p Claire Melamed, Renate Hartwig and Ursula Grant 2011. Jobs, growth and poverty: what do we know, what don't we know, what should we know? Archived May 20, 2011, at the Wayback Machine London: Overseas Development Institute
- ^ "Contract types and employer responsibilities". gov.uk. Retrieved 21 May 2014.
- ^ 26 U.S.C. § 3401(c)
- ^ United States v. Latham, 754 F.2d 747, 750 (7th Cir. 1985).
- ^ "Termination". United States Department of Labor. Archived from the original on 27 September 2012. Retrieved 27 September 2012.
- ^ "Bluenomics". Archived from the original on 2014-11-17.
- ^ a b "Young Worker Safety and Health". www.cdc.gov. CDC NIOSH Workplace Safety and Health Topic. Retrieved 2015-06-15.
- ^ a b c d "Work-Related Motor Vehicle Crashes" (PDF). NIOSH Publication 2013-153. NIOSH. September 2013.
- ^ "Work-Related Motor Vehicle Crashes: Preventing Injury to Young Drivers" (PDF). NIOSH Publication 2013-152. NIOSH. September 2013.
- ^ Joseph Holden, Youth employment programmes – What can be learnt from international experience with youth employment programmes? Economic and private sector professional evidence and applied knowledge services https://partnerplatform.org/?fza26891
- ^ Pastore, Francesco (2018-01-23). "Why is youth unemployment so high and different across countries?". IZA World of Labor. doi:10.15185/izawol.420.
- ^ Chosewood, L. Casey (May 3, 2011). "When It Comes to Work, How Old Is Too Old?". NIOSH: Workplace Safety and Health. Medscape and NIOSH.
- ^ Baert, Stijn (February 20, 2016). "Getting Grey Hairs in the Labour Market: An Alternative Experiment on Age Discrimination" (PDF). Journal of Economic Psychology. 57: 86–101. doi:10.1016/j.joep.2016.10.002. hdl:10419/114164. S2CID 38265879.
- ^ Henderson, Kaitlyn (May 3, 2023). "Where hard work doesn't pay off: An index of US labor policies compared to peer nations". Oxfam. Retrieved February 18, 2024.
The US is falling drastically behind similar countries in mandating adequate wages, protections, and rights for millions of workers and their families. The wealthiest country in the world is near the bottom of every dimension of this index.
- ^ Rank, Mark Robert (2023). The Poverty Paradox: Understanding Economic Hardship Amid American Prosperity. Oxford University Press. pp. 4, 121. ISBN 978-0190212636.
The tendency of our free market economy has been to produce a growing number of jobs that will no longer support a family. In addition, the basic nature of capitalism ensures that unemployment exists at modest levels. Both of these directly result in a shortage of economic opportunities in American society. In addition, the absence of social supports stems from failings at the political and policy levels. The United States has traditionally lacked the political desire to put in place effective policies and programs that would support the economically vulnerable. Structural failing at the economic and political levels have therefore produced a lack of opportunities and supports, resulting in high rates of American poverty.
- ^ Desmond, Matthew (2023). Poverty, by America. Crown Publishing Group. p. 62. ISBN 978-0593239919.
- ^ Kaufman, Bruce E. (2004) Theoretical Perspectives on Work and the Employment Relationship, Industrial Relations Research Association.
- ^ Fox, Alan (1974) Beyond Contract: Work, Power and Trust Relations, Farber and Farber.
- ^ Budd, John W. and Bhave, Devasheesh (2008) "Values, Ideologies, and Frames of Reference in Industrial Relations," in Sage Handbook of Industrial Relations, Sage.
- ^ Befort, Stephen F. and Budd, John W. (2009) Invisible Hands, Invisible Objectives: Bringing Workplace Law and Public Policy Into Focus, Stanford University Press.
- ^ Budd, John W. and Bhave, Devasheesh (2010) "The Employment Relationship," in Sage Handbook of Handbook of Human Resource Management, Sage.
- ^ a b c Yurendra Basnett and Ritwika Sen, What do empirical studies say about economic growth and job creation in developing countries? Economic and private sector professional evidence and applied knowledge services https://partnerplatform.org/?7ljwndv4
- ^ Blattman, Christopher; Annan, Jeannie (2016-02-01). "Can Employment Reduce Lawlessness and Rebellion? A Field Experiment with High-Risk Men in a Fragile State". American Political Science Review. 110 (1): 1–17. doi:10.1017/S0003055415000520. ISSN 0003-0554. S2CID 229170512.
- ^ a b c d e Budd, John W. (2004) Employment with a Human Face: Balancing Efficiency, Equity, and Voice, Cornell University Press.
- ^ a b Rayasam, Renuka (24 April 2008). "Why Workplace Democracy Can Be Good Business". U.S. News & World Report. Retrieved 16 August 2010.
- ^ Joseph Rowntree Foundation, Local labour in construction: tackling social exclusion and skill shortages, published November 2000, accessed 17 February 2024
- ^ All Party Urban Development Group, Building local jobs, p. 18, published in 2008, accessed on 25 December 2024
General bibliography
[edit]- Acocella, Nicola (2007). Social pacts, employment and growth: a reappraisal of Ezio Tarantelli's thought. Heidelberg: Springer Verlag. ISBN 978-3790819151.
- Anderson, Elizabeth (2017). Private Government: How Employers Rule Our Lives (and Why We Don't Talk about It). Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press. ISBN 978-0691176512.
- Dubin, Robert (1958). The World of Work: Industrial Society and Human Relations. Englewood Cliffs, N.J: Prentice-Hall. p. 213. OCLC 964691.
- Ellerman, David P. (1992). Property and Contract in Economics: The Case for Economic Democracy. Blackwell. ISBN 1557863091.
- Freeman, Richard B.; Goroff, Daniel L. (2009). Science and Engineering Careers in the United States: An Analysis of Markets and Employment. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. ISBN 978-0226261898.
- Ferguson, Thomas (1995). Golden Rule : The Investment Theory of Party Competition and the Logic of Money-Driven Political Systems. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. ISBN 0226243176. Retrieved January 26, 2023.
- Lee, Eddy (January 1996). "Globalization and Employment: Is Anxiety Justified?". International Labour Review. 135 (5): 485–98. Archived from the original on 2013-05-16. Retrieved 2017-08-27.
- Markey, Raymond; Hodgkinson, Ann; Kowalczyk, Jo (2002). "Gender, part-time employment and employee participation in Australian workplaces". Employee Relations. 24 (2): 129–50. doi:10.1108/01425450210420884.
- Ostergaard, Geoffrey (1997). The Tradition of Workers' Control. London: Freedom Press. ISBN 978-0900384912.
- Stone, Raymond J. (2005). Human Resource Management (5th ed.). Milton, Qld: John Wiley. pp. 412–14. ISBN 978-0470804032.
- Thompson, E. P. (1966) [1963]. The Making of the English Working Class. New York: Vintage. ISBN 978-0394703220.
- Wood, Jack M. (2004). Organisational Behaviour: A Global Perspective (3rd ed.). Milton, Qld: Wiley. pp. 355–57. ISBN 978-0470802625.
External links
[edit]- Business Link (archived from the original on 29 September 2012)
- "Labor and Employment". Government Information Library. University of Colorado at Boulder. Archived from the original on 2009-06-12. Retrieved 2009-08-05.
- "Overview and topics of labour statistics". Statistics and databases. International Labour Organization.
Employment
View on GrokipediaFundamentals
Definition and Core Concepts
Employment encompasses all persons engaged in any activity to produce goods or provide services for pay or profit, including both subordinate paid work under an employer and own-account work in self-employment.[1] This definition, adopted by the International Labour Organization (ILO), distinguishes employment from broader unpaid work activities, focusing on economic contributions measured in market terms.[6] In statistical terms, employed individuals are those aged 15 and over who performed at least one hour of paid work during a reference period or were temporarily absent from such work due to illness, maternity, or other reasons.[7] At its core, employment operates within labor markets governed by supply and demand dynamics, where workers offer labor services in exchange for compensation, and employers seek to hire based on productivity and costs.[8] Labor supply reflects individuals' willingness to work at varying wage levels, influenced by factors such as population demographics, education, and alternative opportunities, while demand derives from firms' production needs and technological capabilities. Equilibrium in this market determines prevailing wages and aggregate employment levels, with deviations leading to surpluses (unemployment) or shortages (labor scarcity).[9] A fundamental distinction exists between wage employment, characterized by a contractual relationship where employees perform tasks under employer direction and receive fixed or variable remuneration, and self-employment, where individuals operate independently, bearing both risks and rewards of their ventures without subordination to another party.[10] Compensation in employment typically includes wages, salaries, or profits, often supplemented by benefits like health insurance or pensions, though these vary by legal jurisdiction and market conditions. Full employment, a key economic benchmark, occurs not at zero unemployment but when all willing workers are utilized at the economy's potential output, accounting for frictional and structural unemployment inherent to dynamic markets.[11]Participants in Employment: Employees, Employers, and Contractors
The employment relationship constitutes the legal and economic linkage between an employer—typically an individual, business entity, or organization—and an employee, wherein the employee performs services under the employer's direction in exchange for remuneration, such as wages or salary. This bilateral arrangement allocates risks and control, with the employer bearing operational authority over the manner, timing, and location of work, while the employee receives protections like minimum wage guarantees and statutory benefits. Internationally, the International Labour Organization (ILO) defines this relationship as existing when a person performs work or services under certain conditions in return for remuneration, emphasizing the employer's supervisory role to distinguish it from other work arrangements.[12] Employees are workers integrated into the employer's business operations, subject to behavioral control (e.g., instructions on methods and schedules), financial control (e.g., unreimbursed expenses and investment requirements), and relational factors (e.g., provision of tools, benefits, and permanency). In the United States, the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) applies a common-law test incorporating these elements to classify workers, ensuring employees receive withholding of income taxes, Social Security contributions, and eligibility for unemployment insurance, unlike self-employed individuals. Employees' subordination contrasts with autonomous arrangements, as evidenced by U.S. Department of Labor criteria under the Fair Labor Standards Act, which extend overtime and minimum wage protections only to those not operating as independent businesses. This classification prevents mischaracterization that could evade employer liabilities, with courts evaluating factors like the worker's opportunity for profit or loss and integral role in the business.[13][14] Employers assume fiduciary duties toward employees, including compliance with labor laws on hiring, compensation, and termination; for instance, U.S. employers must adhere to the Occupational Safety and Health Act for workplace safety and provide workers' compensation in most states. Employers range from sole proprietors to multinational corporations, with obligations scaling by size—e.g., those with 50 or more employees under the Family and Medical Leave Act must offer unpaid leave. Economically, employers direct production factors, investing capital to coordinate labor, which generates value through specialization but incurs fixed costs like payroll taxes averaging 7.65% federally in the U.S. for Social Security and Medicare matching.[13] Independent contractors, by contrast, operate as distinct businesses providing services to clients (including employers) without subordination, controlling the means and methods of execution while assuming financial risks such as non-payment or equipment costs. The IRS distinguishes them by lack of employer control over "how" work is performed, only the end result, with contractors responsible for self-employment taxes (15.3% on net earnings as of 2025) and ineligible for employee benefits like health insurance mandates under the Affordable Care Act. Globally, ILO Recommendation No. 198 urges clear criteria to avoid disguised employment, where contractors are factually dependent yet denied protections, a practice prevalent in sectors like ride-sharing, where misclassification lawsuits have surged—e.g., over 100,000 U.S. cases resolved via settlements exceeding $1 billion since 2013 per Department of Labor data. Contractors' autonomy enables multi-client engagements but exposes them to market volatility without recourse to employer-provided unemployment benefits.[15][12]Historical Evolution
Pre-Industrial and Agrarian Employment Forms
In hunter-gatherer societies, which predominated until approximately 10,000 BCE, labor was organized around subsistence foraging and hunting with minimal specialization beyond age and sex-based divisions. Individuals typically contributed to collective food acquisition, where men often pursued higher-risk big-game hunting while women focused on gathering plant resources and small game, though recent archaeological evidence indicates women participated in hunting in at least 79% of studied foraging societies, challenging rigid gender stereotypes.[16] This arrangement yielded low productivity surpluses, limiting population densities to under 1 person per square kilometer in most cases and precluding formalized employment structures.[17] The Neolithic Revolution around 10,000 BCE shifted economies toward agrarian systems, where the majority of labor centered on crop cultivation and animal husbandry, enabling settled communities and modest surpluses. In pre-industrial Europe, for instance, 95-99% of the population was directly involved in agriculture by the early modern period, with figures as high as 78% of adult males in England in 1381 declining only gradually to 43% by 1701 due to proto-industrial activities.[18][19] Family-based units dominated, with household members—parents, children, and extended kin—collaborating on plowing, sowing, harvesting, and animal care under seasonal cycles, often supplemented by communal practices like crop rotation or village commons access. This familial labor minimized external dependencies but constrained innovation and mobility, as output per worker remained low at roughly 200-300 kg of grain annually per laborer in medieval systems.[20] Coerced labor forms were prevalent in agrarian hierarchies. Slavery underpinned economies in ancient civilizations like Rome, where enslaved individuals comprised up to 30-35% of Italy's population by the 1st century BCE and performed essential roles in agriculture, mining, and domestic service, generating surpluses that fueled imperial expansion.[21] In medieval Europe, serfdom replaced widespread slavery post-Roman collapse, binding peasants to manorial lands where they owed labor services—typically 2-3 days per week plus harvest corvées—to lords in exchange for protection and plot usage, comprising the primary unfree agricultural workforce by the 9th century CE.[22] These systems enforced output through customary obligations rather than wages, with serfs retaining usufruct rights but facing legal restrictions on relocation or sale.[23] Beyond agriculture, pre-industrial labor included artisanal crafts and trade, often organized via apprenticeships or guilds that regulated skills like blacksmithing or weaving within urban enclaves representing 5-10% of populations. These roles relied on master-apprentice hierarchies, with journeymen providing specialized services in exchange for training and eventual independence, though agrarian ties persisted as many craftsmen supplemented incomes through farming. Such diversification emerged in regions with trade networks, like medieval Italy, but remained subordinate to rural subsistence until technological shifts.[20]Industrial Revolution and the Rise of Wage Labor
The Industrial Revolution began in Britain during the mid-18th century, transitioning production from artisanal and agrarian methods to mechanized factory-based systems, which spurred the expansion of wage labor as a dominant employment form. Innovations such as Abraham Darby's coke-smelting process in 1709 for iron production and Thomas Newcomen's atmospheric steam engine in 1712 laid groundwork for scalable manufacturing, while James Hargreaves' spinning jenny in 1764 and Richard Arkwright's water frame in 1769 enabled efficient textile mechanization, requiring assembled workforces paid by the hour or piece rather than through independent output.[24] [25] By concentrating machinery and labor under one roof, these developments supplanted the domestic or putting-out system, where workers operated from home workshops, fostering instead contractual wage relationships between employers and proletarianized laborers.[26] Parliamentary Enclosure Acts, enacted primarily from 1760 to 1820 with over 3,000 bills passed by 1815, accelerated this shift by privatizing open fields and commons, displacing an estimated 250,000 smallholders and cottagers who lost access to subsistence farming and grazing rights. This consolidation boosted agricultural productivity through consolidated holdings and crop rotation but evicted rural dependents, compelling them to migrate to urban centers like Manchester and Birmingham in search of paid work, thereby supplying cheap labor for factories.[27] [28] Enclosures thus causally contributed to the formation of a wage-dependent class, as former self-provisioners, unable to compete with efficient large farms, entered industrial employment where survival hinged on selling labor power.[29] In factories, wage labor manifested as regimented shifts, often 12 to 16 hours daily in hazardous conditions with minimal oversight until reforms like the 1833 Factory Act limited child labor. Adult male textile workers earned roughly 15 shillings per week by the 1830s, exceeding rural agricultural wages of 7-10 shillings but insufficient for family sustenance without child contributions, which averaged 3-5 shillings for young operatives.[30] [31] This system elevated overall productivity—British cotton output rose from negligible in 1760 to 52 million pounds by 1800—but entrenched dependency on employers, as workers lacked ownership of tools or land, marking a departure from pre-industrial self-employment or feudal ties.[25] Over time, wage labor's prevalence grew, with industrial employment absorbing displaced rural populations and fueling Britain's GDP expansion from £10 million in 1700 to £150 million by 1820, though initial phases amplified urban poverty and inequality before productivity gains yielded broader real wage increases post-1820.[27][32]20th-Century Institutionalization and Post-War Expansion
The 20th century marked the institutionalization of employment through the establishment of government labor departments and protective legislation. In the United States, the Department of Labor was created on March 4, 1913, to oversee working conditions and mediate labor disputes.[33] Union membership grew modestly in the early decades, reaching about 10% of non-agricultural workers by 1920, amid efforts to secure collective bargaining rights.[34] The Great Depression catalyzed further reforms, with the National Labor Relations Act of 1935 legalizing union organizing and prohibiting unfair employer practices, leading to a surge in unionization.[35] Complementing this, the Fair Labor Standards Act of 1938 introduced federal minimum wages, overtime pay, and restrictions on child labor, standardizing wage employment protections across industries.[36] In Europe, similar institutional developments occurred, with early 20th-century unions expanding membership and negotiating collective agreements, often in coordination with emerging social insurance systems.[37] These frameworks shifted employment from ad hoc arrangements to regulated contracts enforced by state agencies, emphasizing worker rights to organization and fair compensation. By mid-century, labor laws had formalized dismissal procedures, workplace safety standards, and unemployment compensation, reducing arbitrary employer control and fostering stable labor markets. Post-World War II, employment expanded amid widespread economic booms driven by reconstruction, pent-up demand, and policy interventions. In the US, the Employment Act of 1946 committed the federal government to pursue maximum employment, coinciding with rapid industrial reconversion from wartime production to consumer goods, which sustained low unemployment rates below 4% through the 1950s.[38][39] The GI Bill facilitated veteran reintegration via education and housing, boosting workforce participation and suburban job growth. In Europe, welfare state expansions, such as the UK's 1945 Labour government reforms integrating employment services with social security, supported full employment goals amid Marshall Plan aid, yielding annual GDP growth averaging 4-5% and near-universal male employment until the 1970s.[40] These policies embedded employment stability within broader social contracts, prioritizing aggregate demand stimulation over market deregulation.Late 20th- to 21st-Century Transformations
In developed economies, the late 20th century witnessed a marked decline in manufacturing employment alongside a rise in service-sector jobs, driven by productivity improvements and structural shifts. In the United States, manufacturing employment peaked at 19.6 million in June 1979 before falling to 12.8 million by June 2019, a 35% reduction, even as output increased due to automation and efficiency gains.[41] [42] Across OECD countries, this transition reflected broader structural transformation, with services comprising over 70% of employment by the early 2000s in many nations, fueled by demand for consumer services, finance, and information sectors rather than trade alone.[43] Globalization intensified these changes through offshoring and import competition, displacing routine manufacturing roles in high-wage countries while creating opportunities in emerging markets. Between 1998 and 2021, the U.S. lost over 5 million manufacturing jobs linked to the trade deficit with China, though studies attribute only a portion to trade versus automation, with offshoring affecting low-skill tasks via cost arbitrage.[44] In Europe, similar patterns emerged, with export-related jobs paying 12% more on average but unevenly distributed, exacerbating regional disparities.[45] Neoliberal policies under leaders like Ronald Reagan and Margaret Thatcher in the 1980s promoted labor market deregulation, weakening unions and easing hiring/firing, which correlated with increased flexibility but also wage stagnation for non-college-educated workers.[46] Technological advancements, particularly computing and automation from the 1980s onward, accelerated job displacement in routine tasks while fostering demand for skilled labor in information technology and knowledge-based roles. Automation expanded capital's role in production, contributing to U.S. wage inequality by displacing middle-skill workers, though historical evidence shows net job creation over decades as new sectors emerge.[47] [48] By the 1990s, the internet enabled remote coordination, laying groundwork for the 21st-century platform economy. Into the 21st century, digital platforms birthed the gig economy, with Uber launching in 2009 and TaskRabbit in 2008, enabling on-demand freelance work that by 2021 involved 36% of U.S. workers in supplemental activities, though comprising less than 1% of primary employment.[49] [50] The COVID-19 pandemic from 2020 further transformed work, accelerating remote arrangements from pre-2019 levels of about 5% full-time to 40% of U.S. employees working remotely at least one day per week by 2023, supported by broadband infrastructure developed post-2000.[51] These shifts emphasized causal drivers like technological complementarity—where workers augmented by machines produce more value—over zero-sum narratives, though they imposed adjustment costs on displaced labor.[52]Forms of Employment
Traditional Full-Time Wage Employment
Traditional full-time wage employment refers to a standard work arrangement in which an employee commits to a regular schedule of 35 or more hours per week for an employer, receiving fixed compensation in the form of wages or salary.[53] This model emphasizes a dependent relationship where the employer directs work activities, provides necessary tools and resources, and often extends benefits including health coverage, paid vacations, and pension contributions.[54] Unlike contingent or self-employment, it typically involves indefinite contracts subject to termination only under specified conditions such as performance failure or economic necessity.[55] In developed economies, traditional full-time positions constitute the majority of paid work. In the United States, Bureau of Labor Statistics data for August 2025 indicate stable nonfarm payroll employment at levels implying predominant full-time engagement, with involuntary part-time work affecting only a subset of workers.[56] OECD-wide, employment rates averaged 72.1% in the first quarter of 2025, with full-time arrangements forming the core despite growth in alternative forms; part-time incidence hovers around 15-20% in many member states, underscoring the persistence of this paradigm.[57] This prevalence stems from historical institutionalization post-Industrial Revolution, where wage labor centralized production and enabled scale efficiencies.[58] Empirical evidence highlights advantages in stability and well-being from full-time wage employment over non-standard alternatives. Standard arrangements correlate with higher access to training, career progression, and social protections, reducing income volatility and enhancing long-term financial security.[59] However, fixed schedules can constrain work-life balance and adaptability, with studies linking prolonged standard hours to potential productivity plateaus if exceeding optimal levels for specific tasks.[60] Causally, wages in these roles reflect marginal productivity contributions, incentivizing output alignment with firm needs, though regulatory mandates on minimum wages and hours can distort equilibria by raising hiring barriers for marginal workers.[58] Overall, this form underpins economic value creation through coordinated specialization, though evolving technologies challenge its exclusivity.[61]Self-Employment and Entrepreneurship
Self-employment encompasses individuals who operate their own businesses or provide services independently, without reliance on wage payments from an external employer, often including sole proprietors, independent contractors, and small-scale operators. Entrepreneurship, typically a more dynamic form within self-employment, involves identifying market opportunities, assuming financial risks, and establishing new enterprises to generate profit through innovation or efficient resource allocation. These forms contrast with traditional wage labor by placing full responsibility for production, marketing, and financial outcomes on the individual or founding team.[62] Globally, self-employment accounts for approximately 25-30% of total employment as modeled by ILO estimates, with rates exceeding 60% in low-income countries where wage opportunities are limited, reflecting necessity-driven rather than opportunity-driven participation. In OECD nations, the average self-employment rate stood at about 13.5% in 2022, varying from under 6% in the United States to over 20% in countries like Greece and Mexico. In the U.S., the Bureau of Labor Statistics reported 9.1 million nonagricultural self-employed workers in the fourth quarter of 2023, comprising 5.7% of total nonagricultural employment, with numbers rising to 9.84 million by October 2024 amid post-pandemic shifts toward independent work.[63][62][64][65] Entrepreneurial activity, as tracked by the Global Entrepreneurship Monitor (GEM), shows total early-stage entrepreneurial activity rates fluctuating regionally; in 2023-2024, fear of business failure deterred 49% of potential starters worldwide, up from 44% in 2019, amid economic uncertainties. In the U.S., GEM data for 2024-2025 indicate entrepreneurial involvement returning to historic highs, with established business ownership rates stable around 8-10% of the adult population. These rates underscore entrepreneurship's role in job creation, as new firms account for nearly all net job growth in dynamic economies, though survival rates remain low, with fewer than 50% of startups enduring beyond five years per empirical analyses.[66][67] Economically, self-employment and entrepreneurship contribute to growth by fostering competition, innovation, and resource reallocation, with OECD studies linking higher business ownership densities to accelerated GDP expansion in 23 member countries over multi-decade panels. However, self-employed earnings exhibit high variance; median incomes often lag wage workers by 20-30% due to irregular cash flows and absence of employer-provided benefits like health insurance or retirement plans. Empirical evidence reveals self-employed individuals work 10-20% more hours annually than salaried counterparts, correlating with elevated stress but also greater autonomy and job satisfaction in surveys of purpose-driven workers. Health outcomes favor the self-employed, who report fewer chronic conditions, potentially from selection effects where healthier, risk-tolerant individuals self-select into independence.[68][69][70] Regulatory environments influence prevalence; lighter tax and labor burdens correlate with higher self-employment rates, as excessive compliance costs deter entry, per cross-OECD comparisons. In developing contexts, self-employment serves as a buffer against unemployment, absorbing labor displaced by structural shifts, though it yields lower productivity per worker than firm-based employment. Entrepreneurship thrives under institutional stability, with access to credit and rule of law explaining up to 40% of variance in startup rates across nations. Despite biases in academic narratives favoring collective models, data affirm that entrepreneurial risk-taking underpins sustained wealth creation, as evidenced by the outsized contributions of scalable ventures to aggregate output.[71][72]Contingent, Gig, and Freelance Arrangements
Contingent employment refers to non-permanent work arrangements where individuals lack an implicit or explicit contract for ongoing employment, encompassing temporary agency placements, contract positions, on-call roles, and short-term projects.[73] Gig work, a subset often enabled by digital platforms, involves discrete, task-specific engagements such as ride-hailing via Uber or task completion on apps like TaskRabbit, emphasizing flexibility over traditional schedules.[74] Freelance arrangements feature self-employed professionals delivering specialized services—such as graphic design or software development—to multiple clients on a project-by-project basis, typically through marketplaces like Upwork or Fiverr, with workers managing their own invoicing and client relations.[74] These categories overlap but differ in structure: contingent roles may involve intermediaries like staffing firms, while gig and freelance emphasize direct, independent task fulfillment.[75] In July 2023, the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics reported 6.9 million workers—4.3 percent of the employed population—engaged in contingent jobs as their primary role, an increase from 3.8 percent in 2017, reflecting post-pandemic shifts toward flexible labor.[76] Broader alternative arrangements, including independent contracting, accounted for 10.2 percent of the workforce in main jobs, with 7.4 percent as independent contractors.[77] Gig economy participation reached 36 percent of U.S. workers in 2024, often as supplemental income, while freelancing among skilled knowledge workers hit 28 percent, generating $1.5 trillion in collective earnings.[78][79] Globally, over 160 million individuals participated in gig activities in 2024, with platforms driving a market valued at $556 billion.[80] In the European Union, digital platform work involved 3 percent of the 15-64 age group in 2022, concentrated in urban transport and delivery sectors.[81] These arrangements provide workers with scheduling autonomy and diverse income opportunities, appealing particularly to younger entrants and those seeking work-life balance, while allowing employers to minimize fixed costs and tap niche expertise on demand.[82] Firms report labor cost savings of up to 30 percent through gig utilization, alongside improved scalability during demand fluctuations.[83] Productivity gains arise from better task-skill matching, with gig models serving as buffers against economic downturns by enabling rapid workforce adjustments.[84][85] However, participants frequently encounter income instability, with 14 percent of U.S. gig workers earning below the federal minimum wage hourly in surveys, and limited access to benefits like health coverage or retirement plans.[86] Turnover rates for gig-dependent firms can exceed 20 percent higher than traditional models, complicating knowledge retention.[83] Economically, these forms enhance labor market dynamism by lowering entry barriers—benefiting youth and displaced workers—but contribute to wage polarization, with high-skill freelancers achieving median earnings over $85,000 annually while low-skill segments face precariousness and suppressed bargaining power.[87][88] Despite growth, empirical analyses indicate mixed well-being outcomes, with flexibility driving voluntary participation for many (e.g., 4.7 million U.S. independents earning over $100,000 in 2024) yet necessity prevailing amid traditional job scarcity.[89][90] Regulatory scrutiny, including worker classification debates, underscores tensions between innovation and protections, though evidence suggests over-regulation risks stifling platform efficiencies that underpin value creation.[91]Economic Principles
Labor Markets: Supply, Demand, and Equilibrium
In labor markets, the interaction of labor supply and demand determines equilibrium wages and employment levels. Labor supply represents the quantity of labor workers are willing to offer at various wage rates, typically upward-sloping because higher wages incentivize greater workforce participation and hours worked, as individuals weigh opportunity costs against leisure and alternative uses of time.[92] This curve aggregates individual decisions influenced by factors such as population size, demographics, education levels, immigration, and tax policies that alter after-tax returns to work.[93] For instance, empirical studies show that increases in working-age population growth expand supply, while expansions of welfare benefits can contract it by raising reservation wages.[94] Labor demand, derived from firms' production needs, slopes downward because employers hire additional workers up to the point where the marginal revenue product of labor equals the wage cost, reducing hiring as wages rise relative to productivity contributions.[95] Shifts in demand arise from changes in product demand, technological advancements that enhance worker productivity, or capital substitution effects; for example, automation can decrease demand for routine tasks while increasing it for complementary skills.[96] Aggregate demand reflects broader economic conditions, with evidence from vector autoregression models indicating that monetary policy contractions reduce demand-driven labor flows.[97] Market equilibrium occurs where labor supply equals demand, clearing the market at the wage and employment quantity where no excess supply or demand persists, though frictional elements like job search frictions yield a natural unemployment rate even in balance.[98] [99] Disequilibria, such as wages set above equilibrium via minimum laws or unions, generate surpluses manifesting as involuntary unemployment, while below-equilibrium wages cause shortages; empirical VAR analyses confirm supply responses to such distortions.[100] This framework underscores causal links from supply-demand imbalances to employment outcomes, with equilibrium restoring via wage adjustments absent rigidities.[101]Wage Formation: Marginal Productivity and Incentives
In competitive labor markets, wages are determined by the marginal revenue product of labor (MRPL), defined as the additional revenue a firm generates from employing one more unit of labor, accounting for both the marginal physical product and the product's market price. Firms hire workers up to the point where the wage equals MRPL to maximize profits, as hiring beyond this point would add more to costs than to revenue.[102] This principle implies that wages reflect the value workers contribute at the margin, with higher-productivity workers or those in high-demand sectors commanding higher pay due to greater MRPL. Empirical studies support a close correspondence between wages and marginal productivity in competitive settings. For instance, data from U.S. manufacturing sectors show that average hourly earnings track closely with labor productivity measures, such as output per hour, over periods like 1947–2015, consistent with the theory's prediction that wages approximate the value of marginal output in equilibrium.[102] However, deviations occur in markets with monopsonistic power, where employers can suppress wages below MRPL, leading to markdowns estimated at 10–20% in some industries; even here, competitive pressures from labor mobility tend to narrow the gap over time.[103] Wage structures incorporating marginal productivity also serve as incentives for worker effort and skill investment. Performance-based pay, such as piece rates, aligns individual output directly with compensation, prompting workers to increase productivity; evidence from manufacturing firms indicates piece-rate workers produce 20–30% more and earn correspondingly higher wages than those on time rates, without significant quality reductions.[104] Fixed wages below MRPL, by contrast, can reduce incentives for exertion, as workers equate marginal disutility of effort to expected returns, leading firms to underutilize labor's potential value.[105] This incentive mechanism extends to long-term human capital formation, where anticipated wage premia for skilled labor encourage education and training investments. Cross-industry data reveal that sectors with steeper productivity-wage gradients, such as technology, exhibit higher rates of skill acquisition, as workers respond to the prospect of capturing marginal gains through career advancement.[106] In non-competitive environments, such as those with strong unions or regulations, rigid wages may distort these incentives, suppressing overall productivity growth by decoupling pay from marginal contributions.[107]Employment, Productivity, and Value Creation
Labor productivity, defined as real output per hour worked, quantifies the efficiency with which labor inputs contribute to goods and services production.[108] This measure captures how technological advancements, capital deepening, and worker skills enable greater output without proportional increases in labor hours, directly linking employment to economic value creation by amplifying the total goods and services available for consumption and investment.[109] In market economies, value creation occurs when the marginal product of labor—the additional output from one more worker—exceeds production costs, allowing firms to pay wages while retaining surplus for reinvestment, thereby sustaining employment and growth.[110] Empirical data from the U.S. nonfarm business sector illustrate this dynamic: labor productivity has risen steadily since 1947, with quarterly index values reaching over 120 (base 2017=100) by mid-2025, reflecting cumulative gains from post-war industrialization and information technology adoption.[111] Annual growth averaged approximately 2% from 1947 to 2023, accelerating to 3.3% in the second quarter of 2025 (revised), driven by sectors like manufacturing and services where capital-labor ratios improved.[108] These productivity increases underpin value creation, as higher output per worker correlates with rising real GDP; for instance, U.S. GDP per capita doubled in real terms from 1970 to 2020, largely attributable to productivity rather than hours worked alone.[58] The relationship extends to wages, where competitive labor markets theoretically align pay with marginal productivity, incentivizing value-adding employment over unproductive roles.[58] Cross-country evidence confirms that aggregate productivity growth closely tracks average wage growth over time, though short-term divergences can arise from bargaining power, regulation, or measurement issues like price deflators.[112] Claims of a persistent U.S. productivity-wage "gap" since 1979, often cited by labor advocacy groups, overstate disconnection when adjusted for total compensation (including benefits) and output prices, as BLS data show hourly compensation rising 4.3% in Q2 2025 alongside productivity gains.[108] Nonetheless, stagnant median wages relative to top earners highlight distributional effects unrelated to aggregate productivity, such as skill-biased technical change favoring high-productivity occupations.[58] Beyond labor productivity, total factor productivity (TFP)—measured as the Solow residual, or output growth unexplained by capital and labor inputs—better captures multifaceted value creation from innovation and efficiency.[113] TFP accounted for over half of U.S. growth from 1950 to 2010, enabling employment expansion without proportional input increases; for example, TFP surged 4.99% in late 2023 per Federal Reserve estimates, supporting robust job creation amid capital augmentation.[114] In low-TFP environments, such as subsidized or regulatory-constrained sectors, employment may persist but generate limited net value, as resources divert from higher-yield uses, underscoring that sustainable value creation prioritizes productivity over sheer employment volume.[115]Legal and Regulatory Frameworks
Employment Contracts: Formation and Enforcement
Employment contracts arise from mutual agreement between an employer and employee, whereby the employee provides labor or services in exchange for compensation, governed primarily by common law principles of offer, acceptance, and consideration. For validity, an offer specifying job duties, compensation, and duration (if any) must be met with unequivocal acceptance, often through a signed document or commencement of work implying assent; consideration is satisfied by the exchange of wages for services rendered. In the United States, no statutory minimum requirements exist for employment contracts, allowing flexibility in terms, though contracts lacking essential elements like mutual intent or lawful purpose are unenforceable. Oral agreements suffice under common law but pose evidentiary challenges in disputes, as courts prioritize written terms for clarity.[116][117][118] The predominant U.S. framework presumes at-will employment, established in the late 19th century—exemplified by a 1884 Tennessee Supreme Court ruling—permitting termination by either party without cause or notice unless a contract explicitly states otherwise, such as fixed-term or for-cause provisions. This doctrine, rooted in freedom of contract, applies to approximately 49 states (excluding Montana, which mandates good cause for terminations post-probation), fostering labor market fluidity but subject to exceptions like public policy violations (e.g., firing for jury duty) or implied covenants of good faith in 11 states. Contracts may include clauses on non-competes, confidentiality, or arbitration, but these must be reasonable and not violate statutes like the Federal Trade Commission's 2024 nationwide ban on most non-compete agreements. Implied contracts can form via employee handbooks or verbal promises, enforceable if they demonstrate mutual understanding, though courts scrutinize for ambiguity.[119][120][121] Enforcement typically occurs via civil litigation for breach, seeking remedies like back pay, reinstatement (rare for at-will roles due to personal service doctrine), or damages, with courts interpreting terms based on plain language and parties' intent rather than extrinsic evidence unless ambiguous. Arbitration clauses, prevalent in over 80% of non-unionized private-sector employment contracts by 2024, mandate private resolution over court, waiving jury trials but criticized for employer-favoring outcomes; the Ending Forced Arbitration of Sexual Assault and Sexual Harassment Act of 2022 exempts such claims. State variations apply—e.g., California enforces implied good faith duties more stringently—while federal laws like the Fair Labor Standards Act overlay minimum wage and overtime obligations, rendering conflicting contract terms void. Voiding factors include duress, unconscionability, or illegality, as contracts cannot compel unlawful acts like discrimination prohibited under Title VII. Empirical data from the Bureau of Labor Statistics indicate at-will flexibility correlates with higher turnover but lower litigation volumes compared to just-cause regimes in Europe.[122][123][124]Core Labor Protections and Rights
Core labor protections and rights establish baseline standards to prevent exploitation and promote equitable treatment in employment relationships, with the International Labour Organization (ILO) articulating eight fundamental conventions grouped into four core categories via its 1998 Declaration.[125] These principles, applicable to all ILO member states regardless of ratification, emphasize freedom of association and effective collective bargaining under Conventions No. 87 (1948) and No. 98 (1949); elimination of forced or compulsory labor per Conventions No. 29 (1930) and No. 105 (1957); effective abolition of child labor through Conventions No. 138 (1973) and No. 182 (1999); and elimination of discrimination in employment via Convention No. 111 (1958).[126] In 2022, the ILO expanded these to include a safe and healthy working environment as a fifth pillar, reflecting Convention No. 155 (1981) on occupational safety and health.[127] Freedom of association grants workers and employers the right to form and join organizations without interference, enabling collective bargaining to negotiate terms like wages and conditions, as evidenced by over 190 ILO member states committing to these standards by 2023.[128] Forced labor prohibitions target practices such as debt bondage or trafficking, with global estimates indicating 27.6 million people in forced labor as of 2021, predominantly in private economy sectors like agriculture and construction.[126] Child labor abolition sets a minimum age of 15 for work (or 14 in developing economies) and bans hazardous employment for those under 18, reducing global child labor from 152 million in 2000 to 160 million by 2020 amid stalled progress post-COVID-19.[126] Anti-discrimination measures prohibit distinctions based on race, color, sex, religion, political opinion, national extraction, or social origin, influencing national laws like the U.S. Equal Pay Act of 1963, which addresses wage disparities by sex.[126] Occupational safety standards mandate risk prevention, training, and health services, with ILO data showing 2.78 million annual work-related deaths, 2.4 million from occupational diseases, underscoring enforcement gaps in high-risk industries.[126] Complementary protections, such as minimum wage and overtime requirements, appear in conventions like No. 131 (1970) but lack universal fundamental status; for instance, the U.S. Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA) of 1938 sets a federal minimum wage at $7.25 per hour since 2009 and mandates 1.5 times regular pay for hours over 40 weekly.[129] These rights' implementation varies, with developed nations achieving higher compliance rates—e.g., 90% in EU countries for core standards—versus 50-60% in low-income regions, per ILO assessments.[126] Enforcement mechanisms include national labor inspectorates and ILO supervisory bodies, which reviewed 400+ cases in 2023, though critics note that overregulation can deter formal employment in informal economies comprising 60% of global jobs.[128] Trade agreements increasingly incorporate these standards, as in the U.S.-Mexico-Canada Agreement's labor chapter, which enforces Mexico's $12 daily minimum wage reforms starting 2023 to curb undercutting.[130] Empirical studies, such as those from the World Bank, indicate that strong protections correlate with lower injury rates but may reduce hiring in labor-intensive sectors by 1-2% per added regulation.[131]Effects of Regulations on Employment Outcomes
Labor regulations, encompassing minimum wage laws, employment protection legislation (EPL), and mandates on hiring, firing, and working conditions, increase employers' costs and reduce labor market flexibility, often leading to lower employment levels and higher unemployment rates, particularly among low-skilled workers and youth.[132] Empirical analyses across countries reveal that these regulations distort labor demand by elevating marginal costs beyond workers' productivity, prompting firms to substitute capital for labor, reduce hiring, or offshore operations.[133] For instance, in rigid labor markets like those in parts of Europe and Latin America, stringent rules correlate with persistent structural unemployment, as evidenced by OECD data showing higher long-term joblessness in nations with elevated EPL indices.[134] Minimum wage increases exemplify these dynamics, with meta-analyses of time-series studies consistently documenting disemployment effects. A 2021 review by Neumark and Shirley examined over 100 studies and found that 79.3% reported negative employment impacts, with elasticities typically ranging from -0.1 to -0.3, implying a 10% wage hike reduces low-wage employment by 1-3%.[135] Earlier syntheses, such as those by Doucouliagos and Stanley (2009), identified publication bias favoring null results but confirmed modest negative effects after correction, concentrated among teens and minorities. While outliers like Card and Krueger's 1994 New Jersey-Pennsylvania comparison suggested no effect or slight gains—later critiqued for methodological flaws and non-replicated in panel data—broader evidence from U.S. state hikes and international cases, including emerging economies, supports net job losses for vulnerable groups.[136] Employment protection legislation, which raises firing costs through severance mandates and procedural hurdles, similarly hampers job creation and turnover. A 2020 meta-analysis by Belke et al. across OECD countries found that stricter EPL elevates unemployment by 1-2 percentage points on average, with stronger effects on youth (up to 4 points) due to reduced hiring risks for employers.[137] Cross-country regressions indicate that nations with flexible EPL, such as the United States (EPL index ~1.0 on OECD scale), maintain lower overall unemployment (around 4% pre-2020) compared to rigid peers like France (index ~2.5, unemployment ~8-10%).[134][138] Reforms liberalizing EPL, as in Denmark's "flexicurity" model post-1990s, boosted employment rates by enhancing reallocation efficiency without spiking insecurity.[139] In contrast, enforcement of compliance in regulated markets like Brazil has been linked to firm-level contraction in formal jobs, as inspections amplify compliance costs and deter expansion.[140] Broader regulatory bundles, including overtime premiums and affirmative action quotas, compound these effects by further rigidifying wages and hiring. Studies on U.S. federal rules, such as OSHA and EEO expansions in the 1970s, estimate small positive compliance outcomes but negligible or negative net employment gains for targeted groups, as firms automate or evade via subcontracting.[141] Right-to-work laws, reducing union-related rigidities, correlate with 2-3% higher state-level employment and lower unemployment durations, per a 2021 analysis of U.S. adoptions since 1947.[142] Overall, while regulations mitigate exploitation risks, causal evidence from natural experiments and panel data underscores trade-offs: they preserve jobs for incumbents but curb creation, exacerbating duality between protected insiders and excluded outsiders, with amplified harms in low-productivity economies.[143][144]Operational Processes
Recruitment, Hiring, and Onboarding
Recruitment involves the systematic identification and attraction of potential candidates to fill organizational vacancies, typically through channels such as job postings on online platforms, employee referrals, recruitment agencies, and campus hiring programs. Empirical studies indicate that employee referrals often yield higher-quality hires with lower turnover rates compared to other methods, as they leverage social networks to pre-screen candidates for cultural fit and reliability. For instance, a longitudinal analysis of twelve recruitment methods found referrals to be among the most effective in terms of subsequent job performance and retention, outperforming mass media advertisements which attract higher volumes but lower fit rates. The average time to fill a position in the United States ranges from 36 to 42 days, influenced by factors like labor market tightness and sourcing strategy efficiency.[145][146] Hiring encompasses the evaluation and selection of candidates from the applicant pool, emphasizing predictive validity to minimize errors in forecasting job performance. Structured interviews, which use standardized questions tied to job competencies, demonstrate significantly higher validity coefficients (around 0.51 for job performance prediction) than unstructured interviews (around 0.38), reducing subjectivity and bias in assessments. Best practices include initial resume screening, cognitive ability tests, work samples, and reference checks, with meta-analyses confirming that combining multiple predictors—such as interviews with ability tests—enhances overall selection accuracy over reliance on any single method. The process incurs substantial costs, averaging $4,700 per hire in 2023, encompassing advertising, interviewing, and administrative expenses, which can escalate to three to four times the annual salary when factoring in lost productivity during vacancies.[147][148][149] Onboarding integrates new hires into the organization through orientation, training on role expectations, and cultural immersion, typically spanning the first 45 to 90 days. Effective programs, including structured checklists and mentorship, boost retention by up to 82% and engagement by 70%, as they foster early identification with the firm and reduce initial uncertainty. Gallup data reveals that only 12% of employees strongly agree their organization excels at onboarding, correlating with higher voluntary turnover in deficient programs, where up to 20% of departures occur within the first 45 days. High-quality onboarding also accelerates productivity ramp-up, with firms reporting 60% faster time-to-proficiency for well-onboarded employees compared to ad-hoc approaches.[150][151][152]Training, Skill Development, and Retention Strategies
Employee training programs aim to equip workers with job-specific competencies, thereby enhancing individual productivity and organizational efficiency. Empirical evidence indicates that targeted training yields a 17% increase in productivity among participating firms.[153] Similarly, skill development initiatives correlate positively with work performance, as they foster adaptability to technological changes and task demands.[154] However, the return on investment (ROI) varies; meta-analyses reveal that while leadership development programs can deliver $7 in benefits per $1 invested, overall training effectiveness depends on transfer to on-the-job application, which is not universally achieved.[155][156] Common training modalities include on-the-job training, where novices learn through supervised practice, and off-site seminars focusing on technical or soft skills. Studies show that programs emphasizing practical application—such as simulations or mentorship—improve knowledge retention and performance more than passive lectures.[157] For instance, a case study of manager training reported a 250% ROI through behavioral improvements leading to higher team output.[158] Skill development extends beyond initial training via continuous professional education, which boosts long-term employability and counters obsolescence in dynamic industries like manufacturing and IT.[159] Retention strategies interlink with training, as opportunities for advancement signal investment in human capital, reducing voluntary exits. The average cost of turnover equates to 100-200% of an employee's annual salary, encompassing recruitment, onboarding, and lost productivity.[160][161] Evidence-based approaches prioritize competitive compensation, clear career paths, and regular feedback; firms implementing mentorship and development plans see lower attrition rates, with voluntary turnover averaging 13% in the U.S. as of 2025.[162][163] Moreover, transparent communication and recognition programs enhance engagement, mediating retention amid economic pressures.[164] While some academic sources advocate expansive wellness perks, causal analysis favors incentives tied to performance over generic interventions, aligning with marginal productivity principles.[165]| Strategy | Empirical Impact | Source |
|---|---|---|
| Targeted Skill Training | 17% productivity gain | [166] |
| Mentorship Programs | Reduced turnover via engagement | [167] |
| Career Development Opportunities | Positive mediation on retention | [168] |
Compensation, Benefits, and Performance Evaluation
Compensation in employment encompasses wages, salaries, and incentive pay, which collectively represent the direct monetary exchange for labor services and are designed to align employee efforts with organizational productivity goals. In the United States, as of June 2025, employer costs for private industry workers averaged $45.65 per hour worked in total compensation, with wages and salaries comprising $32.07 per hour, or 70.2% of the total.[169] This structure reflects economic incentives where base pay provides stability, while variable components like bonuses and commissions reward marginal contributions to output, though empirical studies indicate that such pay-for-performance systems can enhance productivity only when evaluations accurately measure individual value added.[170] Benefits constitute non-wage elements of total compensation, including health insurance, retirement contributions, and paid leave, which employers provide to attract and retain workers amid competitive labor markets. These averaged $13.58 per hour for private sector employees in June 2025, accounting for 29.8% of total costs, with health benefits alone representing a significant portion at around 8-10% of wages depending on industry.[169] [171] Unlike direct pay, benefits often receive favorable tax treatment, effectively increasing their value to employees, but their provision can distort labor markets by favoring larger firms capable of self-insuring risks over smaller ones facing higher administrative burdens.[172] Performance evaluation serves as the mechanism to assess employee contributions, informing compensation adjustments, promotions, and terminations through methods such as management by objectives (MBO), 360-degree feedback, and graphic rating scales. Research on these approaches reveals mixed effectiveness; for instance, traditional ranking methods suffer from rater biases and low inter-rater reliability, while strengths-based appraisals correlate with higher perceived supervisor support and organizational commitment.[173] [174] Firms prioritizing frequent, data-driven evaluations over annual reviews achieve up to 30% higher revenue growth, as they better link pay to verifiable outcomes rather than subjective impressions, though systemic issues like leniency errors persist across implementations.[170] [175]Termination, Layoffs, and Transition Mechanisms
Employment termination refers to the end of the employer-employee relationship, which can occur through voluntary resignation, where the employee initiates departure, or involuntary means initiated by the employer.[176] Involuntary terminations include dismissals for cause, such as poor performance or misconduct, requiring documentation of prior warnings and performance issues to mitigate legal risks like wrongful termination claims.[177] In jurisdictions like the United States, where at-will employment predominates, employers may terminate without cause absent illegal discrimination or retaliation, provided state laws are followed.[178] Layoffs, a subset of involuntary terminations, arise from economic necessities like restructuring, downsizing, or business contraction rather than individual fault, aiming to preserve firm viability by aligning workforce with reduced demand.[176] In the US, the Worker Adjustment and Retraining Notification (WARN) Act mandates 60 days' advance notice for mass layoffs affecting 50 or more employees at a site or 500 overall, with exceptions for unforeseeable events.[179] Empirical analysis indicates that firms opt for layoffs over broad wage cuts to avoid widespread productivity declines from lowered morale, as pay reductions can signal instability and reduce effort across the remaining workforce.[180] In the European Union, layoffs trigger stricter collective redundancy procedures, including mandatory consultations with worker representatives, minimum notice periods varying by country (e.g., 30-90 days), and often statutory severance, reflecting greater emphasis on social dialogue to cushion impacts.[181] Transition mechanisms facilitate smoother exits, including severance pay—discretionary in the US private sector but calculated as one to two weeks' pay per year of service in many packages—to provide financial bridging during job searches.[182] [183] These may bundle continued health benefits under COBRA in the US, outplacement services for resume assistance and career counseling, and eligibility for unemployment insurance, which replaces a portion of lost wages (typically 40-50% of prior earnings, state-dependent).[184] For affected workers, studies document initial earnings losses of 15-35% in the first post-layoff year, with partial recovery over time, though mass layoffs exacerbate local labor market congestion, prolonging unemployment and scarring future employability.[185] [186] Firms benefit from cost savings and refocused resources, but excessive layoffs can harm survivor productivity if perceived as arbitrary, underscoring the need for transparent criteria like seniority or skills mismatch.[187] Mutual terminations, where both parties agree to part ways, often incorporate tailored transitions to avoid disputes, blending elements of voluntary and involuntary processes.[188]Social and Organizational Dynamics
Collective Organizing: Unions and Bargaining
Collective organizing enables workers to form labor unions, which serve as representative bodies negotiating employment terms with employers on a group basis rather than individually. This process leverages collective power to influence wages, hours, benefits, and working conditions, often through formal collective bargaining agreements (CBAs). Unions typically arise in response to perceived imbalances in bargaining power between individual employees and employers, though empirical analyses indicate that such organizing can distort labor markets by restricting worker mobility and elevating costs above competitive levels.[189][190] The formation of unions generally involves an organizing campaign where employees demonstrate support via authorization cards, culminating in a representation election overseen by bodies like the U.S. National Labor Relations Board (NLRB). Certification occurs if a majority votes in favor, granting the union exclusive bargaining rights for the unit. Subsequent negotiations produce CBAs, which outline mandatory subjects such as wages and grievance procedures, binding for a fixed term, often 3-5 years. Impasses may lead to strikes or lockouts, tools for pressuring concessions, though these disrupt production and carry economic costs for both parties. Empirical evidence from wage bargaining episodes shows that contractual wage increases often correlate with reduced employment, as higher labor costs prompt firms to hire fewer workers or automate.[191][192] Union density, or membership as a share of the workforce, has fallen markedly in many economies, particularly the private sector. In the U.S., overall union membership stood at 9.9% in 2024, down from 20.1% in 1983, with private-sector rates at about 6%, reflecting shifts toward service industries less amenable to organizing, increased global competition, and structural economic changes rather than solely employer opposition. This decline has contributed to greater labor market flexibility, correlating with lower unemployment rates and higher productivity growth in states with weaker union presence, though it has also widened wage dispersion by diminishing the compression effects of union scales. Pro-union sources attribute the drop to legal barriers and corporate practices, but cross-state data reveal that right-to-work laws and sectoral transitions explain much of the variance in density without invoking animus alone.[193][194][195] Econometric studies on union impacts yield mixed but predominantly cautionary findings on net employment effects. Unions confer a wage premium of 10-28% for covered workers, driven by bargaining above market-clearing levels, which boosts member earnings but reduces overall hiring and firm expansion, particularly in competitive sectors. Firm-level analyses sometimes detect productivity gains from reduced turnover and "voice" mechanisms, yet aggregate evidence links higher union density to elevated unemployment, slower gross state product growth, and diminished population inflows, as rigid contracts hinder adjustments to demand shocks. In Europe, where bargaining coverage exceeds 50% in many nations, similar patterns emerge: centralized systems stabilize wages but amplify cyclical job losses during downturns. These outcomes underscore that while unions enhance terms for insiders, they often exclude non-members and impose externalities like higher consumer prices or offshoring incentives.[196][197][190]Demographic Factors: Age, Gender, and Participation Rates
Labor force participation rates (LFPR) in employment vary significantly by age and gender, reflecting differences in life stages, education, family responsibilities, and health. Globally, the LFPR for individuals aged 15 and older stands at approximately 60%, with pronounced demographic disparities. In the United States, as of August 2025, the overall LFPR is 62.3%, with prime-age adults (25-54 years) exhibiting the highest rate at 83.7%, while those aged 55 and older participate at 38.1%, and youth (16-24) show lower rates due to schooling and entry barriers.[198] [199] By age, participation follows a lifecycle pattern: low among teenagers (26.5% for ages 16-17 in 2023), peaking in the early 30s (84.5% for ages 30-34), and declining after 55 due to retirement, health limitations, and fewer job opportunities for older workers.[200] Empirical studies indicate that younger workers face challenges from incomplete education and lack of experience, while older individuals encounter age-related health declines and employer preferences for younger hires, contributing to lower attachment to the labor force.[201] Men's prime-age participation has declined across generations, with about 14% of millennial males aged 25 not in the labor force in recent data, linked to factors like lower educational attainment and incarceration rates among less-skilled men.[202] Gender differences persist, with men generally showing higher LFPR than women. In the US, prime-age men participate at 89.0% as of December 2024, compared to 78.1% for women, though female rates have risen historically, peaking overall at 60.0% in 1999 before stabilizing.[203] [204] Globally, women's LFPR is about 40.2% versus higher male rates, with ratios below 1 in most countries; factors include fertility and childcare burdens, which reduce female attachment, alongside social norms and policy restrictions on work.[205] [206] Studies find that declining fertility correlates with increased female participation, but persistent gaps arise from women's greater time allocation to unpaid household work and preferences for flexible roles accommodating family duties.[206] In developing regions, cultural norms and limited access to education further suppress female rates, though over 320 million women entered the global labor force in the past two decades.[205] [207]| Demographic Group | US LFPR (Recent Data) | Global Trends (ILO Estimates) |
|---|---|---|
| Prime-Age Men (25-54) | 89.0% (Dec 2024)[203] | Higher than women, near 95% in prime ages[208] |
| Prime-Age Women (25-54) | 78.1% (Dec 2024)[203] | ~50-60% in many countries, lower due to family roles[209] |
| Ages 55+ | 38.1% (Aug 2025)[198] | Declines sharply post-retirement age[210] |
| Youth (15-24) | Varies, lower due to education | Globally lower for females[211] |
The Working Poor: Causes, Measurement, and Mobility
The working poor consist of individuals or families who participate substantially in the labor force—typically at least 27 weeks per year through employment or active job search—yet whose total income remains below the official poverty threshold. In the United States, the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) applied this definition to 2022 data, identifying 4.5 million working-poor individuals aged 16 and older, equivalent to 2.8 percent of those in the labor force.[212] This measure relies on the U.S. Census Bureau's official poverty guidelines, which for 2022 set the threshold at $14,580 for an individual and $30,000 for a family of four, derived from historical food cost multiples adjusted for inflation but excluding regional variations in non-food expenses like housing.[212] [213] The Supplemental Poverty Measure (SPM), introduced in 2011 and incorporating taxes, transfers, and geographic cost adjustments, yields higher poverty estimates—12.4 percent overall in 2023—highlighting limitations in the official metric for capturing working-poor realities amid rising fixed costs.[214] Globally, the OECD tracks in-work poverty as employment among those below 60 percent of median equivalized disposable income, averaging 8 percent across member countries in recent years, with rates exceeding 10 percent in nations like the United States (by relative measures) and Latvia due to wage dispersion and transfer gaps.[215] [216] Empirical analyses identify multiple causal factors for working poverty, rooted in labor market dynamics, human capital deficits, and household structures rather than uniform exploitation. Low educational attainment correlates strongly, with high school non-graduates comprising 25 percent of the U.S. working poor in 2021 despite representing only 7 percent of the labor force, as such workers cluster in low-productivity sectors like retail and food service where marginal productivity aligns with sub-poverty wages.[217] Family demographics exacerbate risks: single-parent households headed by women face rates five times higher than two-parent families, attributable to childcare burdens reducing full-time work feasibility and per capita income dilution from dependent children.[217] Job instability contributes, with churning between low-wage roles—prevalent among the working poor due to limited bargaining power and skill mismatches—perpetuating income volatility; qualitative accounts document how precarious employment in urban service economies intersects with housing insecurity to trap workers in cycles of eviction and relocation.[218] Macroeconomic pressures, including excess labor supply in unskilled segments from immigration and automation-resistant niches, depress entry-level wages, while policy features like benefit phase-outs create high effective marginal tax rates (often 70-100 percent) that discourage additional hours or skill investment.[219] These factors interact causally: for instance, low labor market attachment (part-time or intermittent work) accounts for over half of working-poor cases, compounded by geographic barriers where low-skill opportunities lag behind living costs in high-demand areas.[220] Mobility from working poverty varies by duration and individual agency, with data indicating transience for many but persistence for subsets facing cumulative barriers. In the U.S., longitudinal tracking reveals that roughly 50 percent of entrants to poverty exit within one year through wage gains from experience or job shifts, though working-poor families show higher persistence amid job market polarization toward high- and low-skill poles.[221] Skill development drives upward transitions: workers acquiring vocational training or postsecondary credentials experience 20-30 percent income boosts, enabling escape from poverty thresholds, yet access remains uneven due to opportunity costs for those in survival-mode employment.[222] Intergenerational patterns underscore challenges, with children of the working poor exhibiting 10-15 percentage point lower odds of reaching the top income quintile compared to averages, linked to neighborhood effects and inherited human capital gaps rather than inherited wealth alone.[223] Policy-induced hurdles, such as welfare cliffs, hinder mobility by netting negative returns on added earnings, while empirical evidence favors deregulation of low-skill labor markets and targeted education subsidies for accelerating exits over income redistribution, which correlates with stagnant rates in high-transfer OECD states.[224] Overall, causal realism points to human capital accumulation and market-driven wage progression as primary mobility engines, with structural interventions most effective when addressing supply-side constraints like education rather than demand-side mandates.Criticisms and Controversies
Exploitation Narratives: Wage Slavery and Coercion Claims
The concept of "wage slavery" emerged during the 19th-century Industrial Revolution, when labor activists used it to describe the perceived loss of control over working conditions in factory employment, contrasting it with chattel slavery to underscore economic dependency on employers.[225] Proponents of exploitation narratives argue that workers are coerced into wage labor by survival necessities, lacking viable alternatives and thus surrendering autonomy to capitalists who extract surplus value, a view rooted in Marxist theory of alienated labor.[226] These claims posit that modern employment replicates slavery's dynamics through low wages, long hours, and limited bargaining power, with some extending the analogy to psychological effects like diminished self-determination. Critiques emphasize the voluntary nature of employment contracts, where workers retain legal rights to negotiate terms, seek alternatives, or exit arrangements without physical restraint, distinguishing it fundamentally from chattel slavery's ownership of persons.[227] In the United States, voluntary quits averaged 3.3 million per month in early 2025, with a quits rate of 2.0% reflecting workers' ability and willingness to leave unsatisfactory jobs for better opportunities, rather than entrapment.[228] Empirical surveys further undermine coercion assertions: 50% of U.S. workers reported being extremely or very satisfied with their jobs in 2024, while 80-90% described their paid work as involving substantial autonomy and creativity, correlating with improved well-being and contradicting widespread alienation.[229][226] Exploitation narratives often overlook employment's role in economic mobility, as access to wage jobs drives poverty reduction; World Bank analyses link quality job availability to escaping low-income status, with labor mobility enabling families in developing regions to achieve higher living standards through voluntary work.[230][231] In competitive markets, wages approximate workers' marginal productivity, fostering mutual gains rather than unilateral extraction, as evidenced by historical alignments between productivity growth and real wage increases when adjusted for price measures.[112] True forced labor, per International Labour Organization estimates of 28 million cases globally in 2022, predominantly involves non-wage mechanisms like human trafficking and debt bondage, comprising a minuscule share of total employment and unrelated to standard contractual wage work in rule-of-law economies.[232][233] Thus, equating voluntary wage labor with slavery dilutes the term's gravity and ignores the contractual freedoms and upward pathways inherent in market-based employment.Unemployment: Structural, Cyclical, and Policy-Induced Causes
Structural unemployment stems from mismatches between the skills, locations, or preferences of workers and the requirements of available jobs, often exacerbated by technological shifts, sectoral reallocation, or demographic changes. Empirical analyses identify key drivers including worker mobility costs, such as relocation expenses or family ties that hinder geographic moves; job mobility costs, like training requirements for new roles; and wage bargaining frictions that delay hiring.[234] For instance, structural changes from automation and offshoring have persistently elevated unemployment in declining industries like manufacturing, where U.S. employment fell from 17.2 million in 2000 to 12.8 million by 2023, with displaced workers facing prolonged reallocation due to skill obsolescence.[235] Skill mismatch metrics, derived from vacancy-unemployment ratios, indicate that in periods of rapid innovation, such as post-2010 recovery, structural factors accounted for up to 2 percentage points of the natural unemployment rate in advanced economies.[236] Cyclical unemployment fluctuates with the business cycle, rising during economic contractions when aggregate demand falls, leading firms to reduce output and labor.[237] It represents the deviation of actual unemployment from its natural rate, comprising structural and frictional components estimated at 4-5% in the U.S. pre-2020. Historical data from the Bureau of Labor Statistics show cyclical spikes during recessions: the 2008-2009 Great Recession drove the U.S. rate from 5.0% in 2007 to a peak of 10.0% in October 2009, with over 8 million jobs lost amid housing collapse and financial crisis.[238] Similarly, the 2020 COVID-19 downturn saw unemployment surge to 14.8% in April 2020, largely cyclical, before reverting toward natural levels by 2022 as demand recovered.[239] Federal Reserve models confirm that such episodes correlate with GDP declines, with Okun's law estimating a 2% GDP drop per 1% unemployment rise.[240] Policy-induced unemployment arises from government interventions that distort labor market incentives, such as minimum wages exceeding market-clearing levels, generous unemployment insurance (UI) extending job search durations, and regulatory barriers raising hiring costs. Minimum wage hikes demonstrably reduce employment among low-skilled and youth workers; a meta-analysis of OECD countries from 1980-2020 found that a 10% increase in the minimum wage elevates unemployment by 0.2-0.5 percentage points, particularly in low-wage sectors.[241] UI benefits, by replacing 40-50% of prior wages on average, prolong unemployment spells: a 2024 meta-analysis of 11 studies estimated that one additional week of benefits increases duration by 0.1-0.2 weeks, with elasticities implying 10-20% longer searches.[242] Occupational licensing and payroll regulations further contribute, as evidenced by U.S. states with stringent rules showing 0.5-1% higher structural unemployment rates; these effects are often understated in mainstream analyses favoring interventionist policies, despite causal evidence from natural experiments like state-level variations.[243] In 2023-2025, with U.S. unemployment stabilizing at 4.1-4.3%, policy factors like extended benefits during recoveries have been linked to slower labor force reentry, sustaining elevated long-term unemployment above 20% of the total.[239]Automation, AI, and Job Displacement Debates
Concerns about automation and artificial intelligence (AI) displacing human labor have persisted since the Industrial Revolution, with fears of technological unemployment recurring amid each major technological shift. Proponents of significant displacement argue that AI's ability to perform cognitive tasks previously thought uniquely human—such as pattern recognition, language processing, and decision-making—could accelerate job losses beyond those seen in prior mechanization waves, particularly in routine and mid-skill occupations.[244] Critics of this view, drawing on historical patterns, contend that automation historically reallocates labor toward non-automatable tasks and spurs demand for complementary roles, maintaining or increasing aggregate employment through productivity-driven growth.[245] Empirical evidence from automation's earlier phases supports limited net displacement. During the U.S. manufacturing automation surge from the 1990s to 2010s, each industrial robot introduced correlated with the displacement of approximately 5.6 workers and a 0.5% wage reduction in affected locales, yet overall unemployment rates did not exhibit sustained spikes attributable to these changes, as economic expansion absorbed displaced labor into services and tech sectors.[246] Similarly, the computer revolution from the 1970s onward automated clerical and routine cognitive work but coincided with employment-to-population ratios holding steady around 60% in developed economies, as new jobs in programming, data analysis, and system maintenance emerged. These outcomes reflect a causal dynamic where technological progress lowers costs, expands markets, and creates demand for labor in innovation and oversight roles, countering direct substitution effects.[52] With the advent of generative AI since 2022, debates have intensified, focusing on its potential to automate non-routine white-collar tasks like coding, writing, and customer service. A 2023 OECD analysis of AI adoption across countries found no evidence of decelerating labor demand or rising unemployment linked to AI exposure, with job postings for AI-complementary skills growing 33% on average in 14 OECD nations from 2019 to 2023.[247][248] Field experiments, such as a 2023 NBER study of customer support agents using generative AI tools, revealed 14% productivity gains without job cuts; instead, AI augmented worker output, improved customer satisfaction, and reduced turnover by enabling faster task completion and skill acquisition.[249] A 2025 SHRM report on U.S. employment similarly concluded that while 10-15% of tasks across occupations face high automation risk from AI, outright job displacement affects only a small fraction, with transformation—redefining roles toward higher-value activities—prevalent in 70% of cases.[250] Sector-specific data underscores uneven impacts. In manufacturing, robot density rose 50% globally from 2015 to 2022, correlating with modest employment declines in low-skill assembly roles but wage pressures limited to 0.2-0.4% annually in exposed industries, offset by gains in engineering and maintenance positions.[251] Service sectors, including call centers and legal support, show AI displacing routine queries—e.g., chatbots handling 30-40% of initial interactions by 2024—but creating demand for AI trainers and ethicists, with net U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics projections for 2023-2033 anticipating stable growth in AI-impacted fields like software development (25% increase).[252] Critics, including MIT economist Daron Acemoglu, warn that without policy interventions like subsidies for human-AI collaboration, AI could widen inequality by favoring high-skill workers, potentially displacing up to 20% of mid-skill jobs in advanced economies by 2030 if adoption prioritizes cost-cutting over augmentation. Optimists, such as Stanford's Erik Brynjolfsson, cite evidence that AI's task-level complementarity—enhancing human judgment in ambiguous domains—mirrors past technologies, projecting 1-2% annual productivity boosts translating to 5-10 million new jobs globally by 2030 via economic expansion.[249][253] Policy responses in the debate range from retraining programs to universal basic income proposals. U.S. initiatives like the 2023 CHIPS Act allocated $52 billion for semiconductor manufacturing, aiming to create 100,000 high-skill jobs amid automation, though evaluations show mixed uptake due to skill mismatches.[254] European Union strategies emphasize "AI augmentation" regulations, mandating human oversight in high-risk sectors, with 2024 pilots demonstrating 15-20% retention of automatable tasks to preserve employment.[244] Empirical consensus holds that while localized displacement occurs—e.g., 2-3% annual churn in exposed U.S. occupations—aggregate unemployment remains driven more by cyclical factors and demographics than technology, with AI-exposed sectors posting 2.5% faster job growth from 2023-2025 per PwC data.[255] This pattern aligns with causal realism: automation erodes task-specific demand but amplifies overall labor needs through cheaper goods, innovation spillovers, and reskilling pathways, provided education systems adapt to demand for AI literacy, which rose 40% in job requirements by 2025.[256]Global and International Dimensions
Globalization: Trade, Offshoring, and Job Flows
Globalization facilitates the international division of labor through trade liberalization and offshoring, resulting in dynamic job flows where employment shifts from import-competing industries to export-oriented or non-tradable sectors. In the United States, manufacturing employment declined from 19.6 million in 1979 to 12.8 million in 2019, with import competition contributing to approximately 40% of job losses in high import-competing industries between 1979 and 2001.[41][257] Offshoring, the relocation of production to lower-cost countries, has amplified this trend, with studies estimating it responsible for over 40% of the U.S. manufacturing job decline from 1993 to 2011.[258] However, offshoring also generates domestic employment in high-skilled roles and supplier industries, though these gains often fail to fully offset losses for displaced low-skilled workers.[259] A prominent example is the "China shock," referring to the surge in Chinese imports following its 2001 World Trade Organization accession, which exposed U.S. workers to intense competition. Research by David Autor and colleagues found that this shock reduced U.S. manufacturing employment by about 1 million jobs from 1999 to 2011, with broader effects including 2.4 million total job losses when accounting for indirect impacts.[260][261] Affected regions experienced persistent declines in employment-to-population ratios, lower labor force participation, and reduced wages, particularly for non-college-educated males, with limited reallocation to other sectors due to geographic and skill mismatches.[262][263] These effects endured beyond the initial import surge, highlighting slow labor market adjustment and inadequate policy responses like trade adjustment assistance.[264] Trade agreements have further influenced job flows, often accelerating offshoring while promising net gains. The North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA), implemented in 1994, supported an estimated 14 million U.S. jobs tied to trade with Canada and Mexico by 2016, yet critics attribute several hundred thousand manufacturing job losses to increased imports from Mexico.[265][266] Similarly, projections for the Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP), negotiated but not ratified, suggested potential annual income gains of $131 billion by 2030 alongside job creation in services, but analyses indicated risks of 1.1 million manufacturing job losses due to trade deficits with partner countries.[267][268] Overall, while globalization enhances efficiency and consumer welfare, empirical evidence underscores asymmetric impacts, with job destruction concentrated in vulnerable sectors and populations, necessitating targeted mitigation to address uncompensated losses.[269][270]Labor Migration: Opportunities and Restrictions
Labor migration enables host countries to fill structural labor shortages in low-skill sectors like agriculture and construction, as well as high-skill areas such as information technology, where native workers may be insufficient or unwilling to participate. In OECD nations, these shortages intensified post-COVID-19, with migration serving as a primary mechanism for labor force expansion; for example, immigration drove much of the prime-age (25-54) labor force growth in the United States, where foreign-born workers accounted for the bulk of increases amid demographic stagnation.[271] [272] Between January 2023 and 2024, foreign-born labor contributed to approximately 50% of U.S. labor market growth, bolstering economic output without proportionally displacing native employment in complementary roles.[273] For origin countries, opportunities arise through remittances, which totaled $685 billion to low- and middle-income economies in 2024—surpassing foreign direct investment and official development assistance combined—and supported household consumption, poverty reduction, and investment in human capital.[274] These flows grew 2.3% in 2024 despite global headwinds, reflecting robust migrant earnings in advanced economies like the United States.[275] Restrictions on labor migration typically include numerical quotas, skill thresholds, and temporary visa frameworks designed to align inflows with domestic labor demands while mitigating risks of wage suppression or fiscal burdens. In the United States, employment-based green cards are capped at 140,000 annually, with a 7% per-country limit that disproportionately delays approvals for high-demand nationalities like India and China, channeling many into temporary H-1B visas subject to annual lotteries of 85,000 slots.[276] OECD countries increasingly prioritize policies matching migration to shortages, such as points-based systems in Canada and Australia that favor skilled workers, but enforce strict enforcement against unauthorized entry, including deportations exceeding 1 million annually in the European Union during peak enforcement years.[277] Some origin states impose outbound restrictions, exemplified by periodic bans on female domestic workers from Indo-Pacific countries like the Philippines and Indonesia to curb exploitation, though these measures often reduce formal channels and inadvertently boost irregular migration.[278] Guest worker programs, prevalent in Gulf Cooperation Council states via the kafala system and in Europe through seasonal schemes, offer opportunities for short-term employment but bind migrants to specific employers, limiting mobility and exposing them to deportation for job changes or contract violations.[279] Between 2005 and 2015, OECD governments expanded incentives for high-skilled inflows while tightening low-skilled pathways, reflecting a consensus on selective migration to maximize economic contributions amid aging populations.[280] These restrictions, while enabling targeted opportunities, can exacerbate global mismatches, as evidenced by persistent shortages in OECD care and construction sectors despite millions of underemployed workers in origin regions.[281]Emerging Trends
Technological Advancements: AI, Automation, and Remote Work
Technological advancements, including automation, artificial intelligence (AI), and remote work capabilities, have profoundly reshaped employment patterns by enhancing productivity while prompting shifts in job types and skill requirements. Automation, which involves machines performing tasks previously done by humans, has historically displaced specific roles but expanded overall employment through economic growth and new opportunities. For instance, during the Industrial Revolution, fears akin to those of the Luddites—who destroyed machinery in the early 19th century over job losses in textile manufacturing—proved unfounded as technological adoption correlated with rising employment levels over decades, driven by increased output and consumer demand.[282][283] In modern contexts, empirical studies from 2020 onward indicate that automation primarily affects routine, low-skilled tasks in sectors like manufacturing, with estimates suggesting up to 54% of European workers in at-risk occupations, yet net job losses are mitigated by reallocation to non-automatable roles.[284][251] AI extends automation's reach into cognitive domains, automating analytical and decision-making processes that once required human judgment. Recent analyses project that by 2030, AI could automate activities equivalent to 30% of current U.S. work hours, particularly in data processing and administrative functions, but this is counterbalanced by job creation in AI oversight, programming, and complementary fields like data annotation and ethical AI implementation.[285] The OECD highlights AI's potential to boost productivity and job quality through augmentation—enhancing worker output rather than full substitution—though low-skilled workers face higher displacement risks, while high-skilled roles may see demand shifts.[286] Empirical evidence from U.S. data between 2015 and 2022 shows AI development correlating with new job emergence and wage growth in tech-adjacent sectors, underscoring a pattern where innovation displaces but ultimately expands labor demand via spillover effects.[287] Critics of alarmist displacement narratives, often amplified in media despite academic biases toward highlighting risks, note that AI's adoption has not yet led to widespread unemployment; U.S. employment rates remained stable post-2020 AI surges, with augmentation prevailing over substitution in observed firm-level data.[288][289] Remote work, accelerated by digital tools and the COVID-19 pandemic, has decoupled employment from physical locations, broadening access to global talent pools and altering participation dynamics. By July 2025, approximately 22.1% of U.S. employees engaged in partial remote arrangements, down slightly from pandemic peaks but sustaining hybrid models that correlate with reduced turnover and elevated job satisfaction.[290] Productivity studies post-2020 reveal gains of around 9% in remote-heavy firms during initial shifts, attributed to fewer distractions and flexible scheduling, though results vary by industry—knowledge work benefits more than collaborative tasks.[291][292] This modality has facilitated higher labor force participation among caregivers and rural workers, mitigating geographic barriers, yet it introduces challenges like isolation and uneven adoption across demographics, with empirical reviews indicating no net decline in overall employment rates but selective advantages for skilled professionals.[293][294] Collectively, these advancements underscore a causal chain where efficiency gains from technology lower costs, stimulate demand, and necessitate workforce adaptation, historically yielding net positive employment outcomes despite transitional disruptions.[295]Hybrid Models and Flexible Arrangements
Hybrid work models, which integrate in-office and remote workdays—typically allocating two to three days per week to each—emerged prominently following the COVID-19 pandemic, enabling organizations to balance structured collaboration with individual autonomy.[296] Flexible arrangements extend this framework, encompassing options such as flextime (adjustable start and end times), compressed workweeks (e.g., four-day schedules), and part-time roles tailored to employee needs.[297] Adoption rates have surged, with hybrid models implemented by 64% of business leaders as of 2025, and 83% of global employees preferring this blend for its equilibrium between flexibility and interpersonal engagement.[298][299] By mid-2025, hybrid job postings constituted 24% of openings, up from 15% in 2023, reflecting a shift from predominantly on-site requirements that stood at 83% in 2023.[300] Empirical evidence on productivity remains mixed, with randomized trials indicating no net decline in output for hybrid setups compared to full-time office work; for instance, a 2024 Stanford study of a Fortune 500 firm found employees working remotely two days weekly matched in-office peers in performance metrics while exhibiting 35% lower attrition rates.[301] Similarly, 69% of managers reported enhanced team productivity under hybrid conditions in Owl Labs' 2025 survey, attributing gains to reduced commuting and focused task execution.[302] Flexible arrangements correlate with improved employee satisfaction and reduced absenteeism, as a 2024 analysis linked schedule autonomy to 60% higher job satisfaction odds and 20% lower stress incidence.[303][304] However, these benefits hinge on robust infrastructure, with surveys noting that inadequate tools hinder 40% of hybrid workers' effectiveness.[305] Challenges persist, particularly in fostering spontaneous collaboration and innovation, where hybrid models can elevate coordination costs and dilute serendipitous interactions essential for creative breakthroughs.[306] Evidence from field experiments reveals that while individual productivity holds steady, team-based innovation suffers without deliberate in-person syncing, as remote dispersion fragments knowledge sharing and exacerbates feelings of isolation among 30% of participants.[307][308] Gallup data from 2025 underscores that hybrid workers average only 2.3 office days weekly, potentially weakening organizational culture unless offset by intentional policies like core overlap hours.[309] Flexible options, while boosting retention for parents and caregivers, may inadvertently widen inequities if not universally accessible, as lower-wage roles often lack remote feasibility.[310] Overall, success demands evidence-based implementation, prioritizing measurable outcomes over ideological preferences.[311]Demographic Pressures: Aging Populations and Skill Shifts
Aging populations in developed economies, driven by declining fertility rates and increased life expectancy, are contracting the working-age population (ages 15-64), intensifying labor shortages in key sectors. In OECD countries, the old-age dependency ratio rose from 19% in 1980 to 31% in 2023 and is projected to reach 52% by 2060, as fewer young entrants replace retiring baby boomers. This demographic shift threatens to reduce potential economic growth by up to 40% in advanced economies, with faster retirements outpacing youth workforce inflows. Globally, fertility rates below replacement levels—averaging 1.5 in high-income countries as of 2023—exacerbate the imbalance, shifting dependency toward older cohorts reliant on a shrinking tax base.[312][313][314] To mitigate shortages, policies have extended working lives, boosting employment rates for older workers; in 2024, the OECD average for ages 60-64 stood at 55.9%, ranging from 77.2% in Iceland to under 30% in some southern European nations. However, fiscal pressures mount as pension systems strain under longer retirements, prompting calls for reforms like raising retirement ages and reducing early exit incentives. In Japan and Italy, where median ages exceed 48 years, labor force participation among those over 65 has increased—reaching 25% in Japan by 2023—but persistent shortages in care, construction, and manufacturing highlight the limits of retention without broader interventions.[315][316][317] Concurrently, skill shifts induced by technological advancements and structural economic changes compound these pressures, creating mismatches between an aging workforce's capabilities and evolving job demands. Older workers, comprising 24.8% of the global working-age population in 2020 (up from 19% in 1995), often possess experience in declining sectors like manufacturing but lag in digital literacy and adaptability to AI-driven tasks. The World Economic Forum's 2025 analysis identifies aging demographics as a key driver of labor market transformation, with 44% of surveyed firms anticipating skill gaps in analytical thinking and technological proficiency by 2029, disproportionately affecting mature economies.[317][318][61] Addressing these requires targeted upskilling, yet barriers like age discrimination and limited access to training persist; OECD data show that only 40-50% of workers over 55 in many countries participate in adult learning, compared to 60% for younger cohorts. Demographic pressures thus amplify skill obsolescence, as slower adaptation among older employees heightens shortages in high-growth fields like IT and green energy, while underutilization—evident in higher involuntary part-time rates for seniors—reduces overall productivity. Reforms emphasizing lifelong learning and flexible work arrangements are essential, though evidence from IMF assessments indicates that without easing regulatory hurdles, advanced economies face sustained output losses.[319][320][316]Empirical Measurement
Key Indicators: Employment Rates, Unemployment, and Underemployment
Employment rates are commonly measured as the employment-to-population ratio (EPOP), defined as the percentage of the working-age population (aged 15 and over) that is employed, per International Labour Organization (ILO) standards. This indicator assesses an economy's ability to utilize its labor resources, complementing labor force participation rates by accounting for those not seeking work. Globally, the EPOP stood at approximately 60% in 2023, with variations by gender—higher for men (around 70%) than women (around 47%)—reflecting structural barriers in many regions. In the United States, the EPOP for prime-age workers (25-54) reached 80.5% in August 2025, indicating robust utilization but below pre-2008 peaks due to long-term declines in participation among certain demographics.[321][322][56] Unemployment rates gauge the share of the labor force (employed plus actively seeking and available unemployed) without work, adhering to ILO criteria that exclude discouraged workers not actively job-seeking. The global unemployment rate remained near its historical low of 5.0% in 2024, affecting about 200 million people, with projections holding steady into 2025 amid moderate economic growth. In the US, the rate edged to 4.3% in August 2025, with 7.4 million unemployed, reflecting a cooling labor market post-pandemic recovery but low relative to historical averages outside recessions. Official rates, however, capture only narrow definitions (e.g., US U-3 measure), potentially understating slack as they omit marginally attached workers.[323][324][239] Underemployment encompasses employed individuals working fewer hours than desired (time-related) or in jobs mismatched to their skills/qualifications (inadequate employment), extending ILO labor underutilization metrics beyond strict unemployment. Time-related underemployment globally affects millions, particularly in informal sectors of developing economies, where it can exceed 10-15% of employment in regions like sub-Saharan Africa and South Asia, per modeled estimates. In OECD countries, skills underutilization rates averaged 20-25% in recent surveys, driven by overqualification among youth and migrants. Broader US measures (U-6) incorporating involuntary part-time workers reached 7.8% in August 2025, more than double the headline rate and highlighting hidden slack in gig and low-wage roles. These indicators reveal that official employment figures often mask suboptimal job quality and hours, with underemployment persisting even at low unemployment due to demand mismatches rather than supply shortages.[321][325][56]| Indicator | Global (2024) | US (Aug 2025) | Measurement Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Employment-to-Population Ratio (15+) | ~60% | ~60% overall; 80.5% prime-age | ILO EPOP; BLS civilian noninstitutional population[326][56] |
| Unemployment Rate | 5.0% | 4.3% (U-3) | ILO labor force basis; excludes discouraged[324][239] |
| Broader Underemployment (e.g., U-6 equivalent) | Varies; 10-20% in underutilization | 7.8% | Includes part-time for economic reasons; ILO time/skills mismatch[321][56] |
Global Datasets and National Variations
The International Labour Organization's ILOSTAT database functions as the principal global source for labour statistics, offering indicators including employment-to-population ratios, unemployment rates, labour force participation, and informal employment prevalence for more than 200 countries and territories.[326] These data derive from national household surveys, censuses, and administrative records, supplemented by econometric modeling for harmonization and gap-filling to enable cross-national comparability.[327] Complementary resources include the World Bank's World Development Indicators, which integrate ILO-modeled estimates for metrics such as total unemployment as a percentage of the labor force and employment by economic sector, supporting analyses of development-linked employment patterns.[328] For high-income OECD members, the OECD Employment Database delivers granular, standardized statistics on employment rates, working hours, and job tenure, underscoring variations tied to policy frameworks like activation measures and family support systems.[329] Key global indicators reveal baseline employment dynamics, with the worldwide labor force participation rate at 61.0% and unemployment at 5.0% as of 2023 estimates.[3] The employment-to-population ratio for ages 15+, a core measure of labor utilization, typically hovers around 58% globally, reflecting the share of the working-age population in paid or self-employment.[322] National deviations in this ratio stem from structural factors: advanced economies often achieve ratios above 60% through robust service sectors and gender-inclusive policies, as in Switzerland and Iceland where rates exceed 65%.[330] In contrast, developing regions like Sub-Saharan Africa report ratios below 55%, hampered by agricultural subsistence work, youth bulges, and limited industrialization.[331] Unemployment exhibits pronounced national heterogeneity, with the global rate projected at 4.9% for 2024 amid uneven post-pandemic recovery.[332] Modeled ILO estimates via the World Bank highlight extremes: low rates under 3% in East Asian nations like Japan and South Korea, attributable to lifetime employment norms and export-led growth; elevated figures over 20% in Spain and South Africa, exacerbated by skill mismatches, rigid labor regulations, and commodity dependence.[328] [333] Youth unemployment amplifies these disparities, often double the adult rate in middle-income countries due to educational-occupational gaps.[3]| Region | Avg. Unemployment Rate (2024, %) | Key Variation Factors |
|---|---|---|
| East Asia & Pacific | 4.5 | Export manufacturing, demographic dividends[334] |
| European Union | 6.0 | Social welfare, varying integration policies[335] |
| Sub-Saharan Africa | 6.5 (but higher informal underemployment) | Structural transformation lags, resource curses[328] |
| Latin America & Caribbean | 6.5 | Commodity cycles, informal sector dominance[331] |
