| Literature DB >> 35308060 |
Charlie Joyez1, Catherine Laffineur1.
Abstract
This article presents the Occupation Space, a weighted and directed network of occupations built from an extensive database that tracks French workers employment trajectories between 2003 and 2015. In this network, the links between occupations stands for the easiness to switch from one occupation to another that we interpret as being a good proxy for skill proximity between occupations. The article first describes the structural characteristics of the network. We show that some occupations offer workers important redeployment possibilities to other occupations. Then we use information on the centrality of occupations in the network to analyze its correlation with wage premium and unemployment duration. Our results show that the network-based index of centrality is informative of the sources of several labor market outcomes and inequalities.Entities:
Keywords: Centrality; Network analysis; Occupational mobility
Year: 2022 PMID: 35308060 PMCID: PMC8919354 DOI: 10.1007/s41109-022-00453-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Appl Netw Sci ISSN: 2364-8228
Fig. 1From panel data to network. Note: Worker A held occupation 1 in t − 1 and then occupation 2 at time t, generating the directed arrow from node 1 to 2 in the occupation space
Fig. 2The French Occupation Space. This graph has been realized with Gephi software using OpenOrd algorithm (Martin et al. 2011). The nodes’ sizes are proportional to their outward centrality, and their color correspond to PCS-1digit communities classes. Edges’ sizes are proportional to their weights. Only top 50% of existing edges were represented
Comparison of network structure: random versus occupation space
| Index | 95% CI null model | Occupation space |
|---|---|---|
| Diameter | [3;3] | 3 |
| average path | [1.825;1.825] | 1.98 |
| clustering coefficient | [0.1801; 0.1830] | 0.176 |
| Disparity | [0.0291; 0.0298] | 0.031 |
| Degree centralization | [0.0528; 0.0865] | 0.188 |
| Strength centralization (weighted) | [0 | 0.0132 |
| Reciprocity | [0.1110;0.1229] | 0.820 |
Fig. 3Distribution of nodes centrality indexes. Note: The Figure displays the distribution of nodes (occupations) according to several outcomes: outward degree (upper left), outward strength (upper right) and centrality (lower panel)
Most and least central occupations
| Centrality rank | Occupation code | Occupation | Out degree | Out strength | Centrality |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 483a | Supervisors in mechanical engineering, metalworking | 46 | 694.2619 | 178.7066 |
| 2 | 387e | Engineers and managers of maintenance, upkeep and new works | 69 | 454.6431 | 177.1168 |
| 3 | 386b | Engineers and study executives, research and development of energy distribution, water | 60 | 521.8799 | 176.9542 |
| 4 | 628d | Skilled setters of manufacturing equipment (excluding metalworking and mechanical) | 36 | 835.0168 | 173.3799 |
| 5 | 484b | Supervisors in manufacturing: metallurgy, heavy materials and other processing industries | 50 | 595.401 | 172.54 |
| … | |||||
| 265 | 562b | Salaried hairdressers | 26 | 70.49376 | 42.81165 |
| 266 | 642a | taxi drivers | 9 | 183.2547 | 40.61147 |
| 267 | 431f | Nurses in general care, salaried | 14 | 106.7873 | 38.66552 |
| 268 | 526c | Childcare auxiliaries | 12 | 96.81557 | 34.085 |
| 269 | 546d | Stewards | 6 | 55.04745 | 18.17374 |
Fig. 4Centrality and number of workers by occupations. Note: Each dot corresponds to a particular occupation. For each occupation we report its density (number of workers) and centrality in the network
Average centrality according to socio-demographic characteristics
| Average centrality (in log) | |
|---|---|
| Overall sample | 105.5 |
| Master/Ph.D. | 123.9* |
| Some college | 108.6* |
| Upper general high-school | 105.9 |
| Upper technical high-school | 102.2* |
| Lower high-school | 100.8* |
| No diploma | 98.5* |
| Women | 114.9* |
| Men | 94.2* |
| < 30 | 102.6* |
| 30–39 | 107.6 |
| 40–49 | 106.4 |
| 50–60 | 105.1 |
The asterisk indicate the significance of differences in mean compared to overall average
Correlation between occupation centrality and wage premia
| Dependent variable: Hourly Wage | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| OLS | OLS | OLS | OLS-FE | |
| (1) | (2) | (3) | (4) | |
| Outward degree | 0.045 | – | – | – |
| (19.72)*** | – | – | – | |
| Outward strength | – | 0.229 | – | – |
| – | (96.11)*** | – | – | |
| Centrality | – | – | 0.203 | 0.064 |
| – | – | (70.28)*** | (3.83)*** | |
| – | – | |||
| Age | 0.006 | 0.006 | 0.006 | 0.028 |
| (52.83)*** | (52.05)*** | (52.12)*** | (23.63)*** | |
| Diploma: (ref: higher diploma) | ||||
| Some college | − 0.230 | − 0.201 | − 0.202 | − 0.111 |
| (59.13)*** | (52.44)*** | (52.08)*** | (3.34)*** | |
| Upper general high-school | − 0.464 | − 0.410 | − 0.432 | − 0.181 |
| (124.81)*** | (110.51)*** | (116.08)*** | (4.92)*** | |
| Upper technical high-school | − 0.610 | − 0.532 | − 0.564 | − 0.352 |
| (177.24)*** | (152.60)*** | (161.93)*** | (8.37)*** | |
| Lower high-school | − 0.634 | − 0.558 | − 0.590 | − 0.645 |
| (137.10)*** | (120.78)*** | (127.42)*** | (13.77)*** | |
| No diploma | − 0.828 | − 0.735 | − 0.778 | − 0.525 |
| (223.43)*** | (194.55)*** | (207.30)*** | (11.16)*** | |
| Female (ref: male) | − 0.339 | − 0.284 | − 0.298 | |
| (163.70)*** | (136.35)*** | (140.65)*** | ||
| Seniority | 0.001 | 0.001 | 0.001 | 0.000 |
| (111.18)*** | (99.86)*** | (108.26)*** | (1.07) | |
| constant | 7.244 | 6.118 | 6.433 | 6.172 |
| (664.51)*** | (414.95)*** | (421.94)*** | (32.83)*** | |
| Year fixed effects | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| 0.30 | 0.32 | 0.31 | 0.01 | |
| 277,479 | 277,479 | 277,479 | 277,479 | |
This table shows estimate from OLS and FE-OLS regressions of Eq. (2) and (3). The outcome variable is hourly wage. Column (1) shows estimates with outward degree. Column (2) reports estimates with outward strength. Column (3) shows estimates with Opsahl et al. (2010) Centrality index. Column (4) adds individual fixed effects to the estimation reported in column (3). Standard erors are clustered at the workers level
*p < 0.1; **p < 0.05; ***p < 0.01
Correlation between last occupation centrality and unemployment duration
| Dependent variable: unemployment length | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| OLS | OLS | OLS | OLS-FE | |
| (1) | (2) | (3) | (4) | |
| Outward degree | − 0.021 | – | – | – |
| (1.29) | – | – | – | |
| Outward strength | – | − 0.159 | – | – |
| – | (9.16)*** | – | – | |
| Centrality | – | – | − 0.137 | − 0.264 |
| – | – | (6.46)*** | (1.89)* | |
| Age | 0.008 | 0.008 | 0.008 | 0.785 |
| (14.27)*** | (15.00)*** | (14.51)*** | (48.13)*** | |
| Diploma: (ref: higher diploma) | ||||
| Some college | − 0.058 | − 0.069 | − 0.064 | − 0.100 |
| (2.02)** | (2.42)** | (2.25)** | (0.24) | |
| Upper general high-school | 0.007 | − 0.022 | − 0.008 | − 0.567 |
| (0.28) | (0.88) | (0.33) | (1.11) | |
| Upper technical high-school | 0.059 | 0.020 | 0.037 | − 0.515 |
| (2.57)** | (0.86) | (1.57) | (0.87) | |
| Lower high-school | 0.116 | 0.078 | 0.097 | − 0.476 |
| (4.14)*** | (2.76)*** | (3.44)*** | (0.77) | |
| No diploma | 0.194 | 0.147 | 0.168 | − 0.576 |
| (8.39)*** | (6.23)*** | (7.16)*** | (0.94) | |
| Female (ref: male) | 0.011 | − 0.011 | − 0.004 | |
| (0.88) | (0.88) | (0.36) | ||
| Seniority | 0.001 | 0.001 | 0.001 | 0.000 |
| (111.18)*** | (99.86)*** | (108.26)*** | (1.07) | |
| constant | 1.069 | 1.861 | 1.643 | − 24.584 |
| (14.00)*** | (17.92)*** | (15.00)*** | (24.93)*** | |
| Year fixed effects | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| 0.02 | 0.03 | 0.03 | 0.20 | |
| 25,502 | 25,502 | 25,502 | 25,502 | |
This table shows estimate from OLS and FE-OLS regressions of Eqs. (2) and (3). The outcome variable is unemployment duration. Column (1) shows estimates with outward degree. Column (2) reports estimates with outward strength. Column (3) shows estimates with Opsahl et al. (2010) Centrality index. Column (4) adds individual fixed effects to the estimation reported in column (3). Standard erors are clustered at the workers level
*p < 0.1; **p < 0.05; ***p < 0.01
Zero inflated negative binomial model
| Occupation movement from occupation i to j | |
|---|---|
| Number of employees in occ. i (log) | 0.437 (50.36)*** |
| Number of employees in occ. j (log) | 0.491 (52.50)*** |
| Wage premium in occ j | 0.056 (2.69)*** |
| Average wage in occ. i (log) | 0.167 (5.62)*** |
| Average wage in occ. j (log) | 0.199 (6.54)*** |
| Average age in occ. i | − 0.01 (3.44)*** |
| Average age in occ. j | − 0.005 (1.71)* |
| Share of men in occ. i | − 0.06 (1.79)* |
| Share of men in occ. j | − 0.044 (1.29) |
| Growth rate of employment share in occ. i | 0.00 (0.11) |
| Growth rate of employment share in occ. j | − 0.00 (0.00) |
| Both urban occupations | 0.085 (1.19) |
| Both rural occupations | 0.122 (1.89)* |
| constant | − 7.762 (30.59)*** |
| Observations | 72,092 |
*p < 0.1; **p < 0.05; ***p < 0.01
Labor flow is the cumulative flow of labor from the occupation of origin (occupation i) to the destination occupation (occupation j) from 2003 to 2015 that are derived from the DADS Panel database cleaned as explained above. All other variables are constructed from the same the DADS Panel
Alternative centrality measures and wage premia
| OLS | OLS-FE | OLS | OLS-FE | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Wage | Wage | Wage | Wage | |
| Betweenness | − 0.004 | − 0.003 | ||
| (4.26)*** | (0.84) | |||
| Eigenvector centrality (weighted) | 0.018 | 0.008 | ||
| (17.84)*** | (2.33)** | |||
| Age | 0.006 | 0.028 | 0.006 | 0.028 |
| (53.16)*** | (23.59)*** | (53.52)*** | (23.58)*** | |
| Diploma: (ref: higher diploma) | ||||
| Some college | − 0.240 | − 0.112 | − 0.238 | − 0.111 |
| (61.96)*** | (3.37)*** | (61.45)*** | (3.35)*** | |
| Upper general high-school | − 0.469 | − 0.182 | − 0.468 | − 0.181 |
| (126.28)*** | (4.93)*** | (126.06)*** | (4.91)*** | |
| Upper technical high-school | − 0.618 | − 0.352 | − 0.616 | − 0.352 |
| (180.09)*** | (8.37)*** | (179.56)*** | (8.37)*** | |
| Lower high-school | − 0.640 | − 0.645 | − 0.638 | − 0.644 |
| (138.62)*** | (13.77)*** | (138.18)*** | (13.76)*** | |
| No diploma | − 0.833 | − 0.524 | − 0.829 | − 0.524 |
| (225.37)*** | (11.14)*** | (223.72)*** | (11.13)*** | |
| Female (ref: male) | − 0.350 | − 0.346 | ||
| (171.83)*** | (172.01)*** | |||
| Seniority | 0.001 | 0.000 | 0.001 | 0.000 |
| (109.64)*** | (1.21) | (109.31)*** | (1.25) | |
| Constant | 7.448 | 6.483 | 7.240 | 6.380 |
| (976.11)*** | (37.46)*** | (604.30)*** | (36.34)*** | |
| Year fixed effects | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| 0.30 | 0.01 | 0.30 | 0.01 | |
| 277,479 | 277,479 | 277,479 | 277,479 |
*p < 0.1; **p < 0.05; ***p < 0.01
Alternative centrality measures and unemployment duration
| OLS | OLS-FE | OLS | OLS-FE | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Wage | Wage | Wage | Wage | |
| Betweenness | 0.003 | − 0.058 | ||
| (0.61) | (1.72)* | |||
| Eigenvector centrality (weighted) | − 0.008 | 0.055 | ||
| (1.27) | (1.61) | |||
| Age | 0.008 | 0.785 | 0.008 | 0.784 |
| (14.32)*** | (48.13)*** | (14.31)*** | (48.12)*** | |
| Diploma: (ref: higher diploma) | ||||
| Some college | − 0.057 | − 0.099 | − 0.057 | − 0.126 |
| (2.00)** | (0.24) | (1.99)** | (0.30) | |
| Upper general high-school | 0.008 | − 0.567 | 0.008 | − 0.586 |
| (0.32) | (1.11) | (0.32) | (1.14) | |
| Upper technical high-school | 0.062 | − 0.510 | 0.061 | − 0.564 |
| (2.68)*** | (0.86) | (2.66)*** | (0.95) | |
| Lower high-school | 0.117 | − 0.469 | 0.117 | − 0.536 |
| (4.17)*** | (0.76) | (4.17)*** | (0.87) | |
| No diploma | 0.196 | − 0.571 | 0.195 | − 0.613 |
| (8.52)*** | (0.93) | (8.46)*** | (1.00) | |
| Female (ref: male) | 0.013 | 0.012 | ||
| (1.10) | (0.95) | |||
| constant | 0.965 | − 25.484 | 1.063 | − 26.326 |
| (18.56)*** | (32.83)*** | (14.42)*** | (31.77)*** | |
| Year fixed effects | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| 0.02 | 0.20 | 0.02 | 0.20 | |
| 25,502 | 25,502 | 25,502 | 25,502 |
*p < 0.1; **p < 0.05; ***p < 0.01