Origins of labor market changes in the transition to an information economy : wage structure, employment, and occupation transformation in Taiwan after 1990

Labor market change in societies where an information economy is evolving, is a central area of concern for information society scholars today. While there has been considerable research conducted on cases of developed countries, research on labor market changes during a transition to an information...

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Main Author: Wang, Wei-ching
Format: Others
Language:English
Published: 2009
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2152/6587
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spelling ndltd-UTEXAS-oai-repositories.lib.utexas.edu-2152-65872015-09-20T16:53:26ZOrigins of labor market changes in the transition to an information economy : wage structure, employment, and occupation transformation in Taiwan after 1990Wang, Wei-chingInformation economyLabor market changeTaiwanTaiwan economyTaiwan politics and governmentEmploymentUnemploymentWagesOccupationsLabor market change in societies where an information economy is evolving, is a central area of concern for information society scholars today. While there has been considerable research conducted on cases of developed countries, research on labor market changes during a transition to an information economy outside of the advanced industrial economies is scarce. Thus, this dissertation proposes to examine the changes in wage, employment, and occupation structure that take place when an NIC, such as Taiwan, ushers in an information economy, and to explore the reasons behind these changes. This dissertation combined the historical, policy, and statistical analyses and concluded that the transformation from labor intensive manufacturing to an information intensive economy, as arranged by the Taiwanese government due to its own political and governing purposes, and also in the context of international political and economic circumstances, determined Taiwan’s economic resource arrangement, which resulted in an increasingly unbalanced labor market in terms of wage distribution, unemployment, and occupation structure. This transformation changed and shaped the structure of the labor market to benefit workers more skilled with information, more professional, having higher level knowledge and a higher level of education, while an increasing amount of white-collar and service workers began earning comparatively low wages. At the same time the demand for blue-collar and lower skill workers severely declined. Moreover, the total labor demand of information manufacturing and information intensive service is much less than that of traditional labor intensive manufacturing, resulting in Taiwan’s increasing unemployment problem. Among these processes, many different social, political, policy, and economic factors interacted and collectively determined this result. Among them, the role of the state in shaping Taiwan’s information economy in general and the labor market situation in particular did matter considerably.text2009-10-21T19:05:43Z2009-10-21T19:05:43Z2009-052009-10-21T19:05:43Zelectronichttp://hdl.handle.net/2152/6587engCopyright is held by the author. Presentation of this material on the Libraries' web site by University Libraries, The University of Texas at Austin was made possible under a limited license grant from the author who has retained all copyrights in the works.
collection NDLTD
language English
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Information economy
Labor market change
Taiwan
Taiwan economy
Taiwan politics and government
Employment
Unemployment
Wages
Occupations
spellingShingle Information economy
Labor market change
Taiwan
Taiwan economy
Taiwan politics and government
Employment
Unemployment
Wages
Occupations
Wang, Wei-ching
Origins of labor market changes in the transition to an information economy : wage structure, employment, and occupation transformation in Taiwan after 1990
description Labor market change in societies where an information economy is evolving, is a central area of concern for information society scholars today. While there has been considerable research conducted on cases of developed countries, research on labor market changes during a transition to an information economy outside of the advanced industrial economies is scarce. Thus, this dissertation proposes to examine the changes in wage, employment, and occupation structure that take place when an NIC, such as Taiwan, ushers in an information economy, and to explore the reasons behind these changes. This dissertation combined the historical, policy, and statistical analyses and concluded that the transformation from labor intensive manufacturing to an information intensive economy, as arranged by the Taiwanese government due to its own political and governing purposes, and also in the context of international political and economic circumstances, determined Taiwan’s economic resource arrangement, which resulted in an increasingly unbalanced labor market in terms of wage distribution, unemployment, and occupation structure. This transformation changed and shaped the structure of the labor market to benefit workers more skilled with information, more professional, having higher level knowledge and a higher level of education, while an increasing amount of white-collar and service workers began earning comparatively low wages. At the same time the demand for blue-collar and lower skill workers severely declined. Moreover, the total labor demand of information manufacturing and information intensive service is much less than that of traditional labor intensive manufacturing, resulting in Taiwan’s increasing unemployment problem. Among these processes, many different social, political, policy, and economic factors interacted and collectively determined this result. Among them, the role of the state in shaping Taiwan’s information economy in general and the labor market situation in particular did matter considerably. === text
author Wang, Wei-ching
author_facet Wang, Wei-ching
author_sort Wang, Wei-ching
title Origins of labor market changes in the transition to an information economy : wage structure, employment, and occupation transformation in Taiwan after 1990
title_short Origins of labor market changes in the transition to an information economy : wage structure, employment, and occupation transformation in Taiwan after 1990
title_full Origins of labor market changes in the transition to an information economy : wage structure, employment, and occupation transformation in Taiwan after 1990
title_fullStr Origins of labor market changes in the transition to an information economy : wage structure, employment, and occupation transformation in Taiwan after 1990
title_full_unstemmed Origins of labor market changes in the transition to an information economy : wage structure, employment, and occupation transformation in Taiwan after 1990
title_sort origins of labor market changes in the transition to an information economy : wage structure, employment, and occupation transformation in taiwan after 1990
publishDate 2009
url http://hdl.handle.net/2152/6587
work_keys_str_mv AT wangweiching originsoflabormarketchangesinthetransitiontoaninformationeconomywagestructureemploymentandoccupationtransformationintaiwanafter1990
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