Occupational Composition and Racial/Ethnic Inequality in Varying Work Hours in the Great Recession

Ryan Finnigan, Savannah M. Hunter
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引用次数: 5

Abstract

Abstract A varying number of work hours from week to week creates considerable hardships for workers and their families, like volatile earnings and work–family conflict. Yet little empirical work has focused on racial/ethnic differences in varying work hours, which may have increased substantially in the Great Recession of the late 2000s. We extend literatures on racial/ethnic stratification in recessions and occupational segregation to this topic. Analyses of the Survey of Income and Program Participation show varying weekly hours became significantly more common for White and Black, but especially Latino workers in the late 2000s. The growth of varying weekly hours among White and Latino workers was greatest in predominantly minority occupations. However, the growth among Black workers was greatest in predominantly White occupations. The chapter discusses implications for disparities in varying hours and the salience of occupational composition beyond earnings.
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大萧条时期不同工作时间的职业构成和种族/民族不平等
每周不同的工作时间给工人和他们的家庭带来了相当大的困难,比如不稳定的收入和工作与家庭的冲突。然而,很少有实证研究关注不同工作时间的种族/民族差异,这种差异可能在本世纪头十年末的大衰退中大幅增加。我们将有关经济衰退和职业隔离中的种族/民族分层的文献扩展到这个主题。对收入和项目参与调查的分析显示,在2000年代后期,白人和黑人,尤其是拉丁裔工人,每周工作时间的差异变得更加普遍。在以少数族裔为主的职业中,白人和拉丁裔工人每周工作时间的变化幅度最大。然而,在以白人为主的职业中,黑人工人的增长最大。本章讨论了不同工作时间差异的影响,以及收入之外职业构成的显著性。
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