A retrospective analysis of employment tenures: Evidence from the latter half of the twentieth century
Authors: Luke Ignaczak and Marcel Voia
Overview
Abstract (English)
Popular perception holds that average employment durations have declined in recent decades. However, most studies conclude that the proportion of long-term employment relationships has remained remarkably stable over time. To shed light on this discrepancy we use distribution analysis to systematically track changes in Canadian employment durations over the second half of the 20th century. The analysis reveals that earlier cohorts were more likely to have longer employment durations than later cohorts and that there are shifts in proportions between longer and shorter work episodes with employment durations declining sharply for men and mixed results for women.
Abstract (French)
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Details
Type | Journal article |
---|---|
Author | Luke Ignaczak and Marcel Voia |
Publication Year | 2011 |
Title | A retrospective analysis of employment tenures: Evidence from the latter half of the twentieth century |
Volume | 25 |
Journal Name | Labour |
Number | 1 |
Pages | 97-125 |
Publication Language | English |
- Luke Ignaczak
- Luke Ignaczak and Marcel Voia
- A retrospective analysis of employment tenures: Evidence from the latter half of the twentieth century
- Labour
- 25
- 2011
- 1
- 97-125