动态依赖:地方劳动力市场的地理考察

Dynamic Dependencies: A Geographic Investigation of Local Labor Markets

Economic Geography · 1992
被引 199
人大 A-ABS 4

中文导读

通过访谈马萨诸塞州伍斯特市制造业和生产者服务业的工人与雇主,揭示地方劳动力市场如何通过雇主和员工的日常互动、选址策略和通勤偏好而形成,并导致劳动力分割。

Abstract

Knowledge is grounded in experience, which in large part is rooted in the place-bound interactions of everyday life. We view labor market processes in the context of such interactions and explore the ways in which the experience-based knowledges of employers and employees construct labor markets within metropolitan areas and contribute to segmentation within the labor force. In-depth interviews with workers and employers in the manufactur- ing and producer services sectors of Worcester, Massachusetts, reveal the place-based processes through which local labor markets and segmentations develop. Employers prove to be astute social geographers, keenly aware of local variations in the residential landscape, locating their firms to win proximity to a local labor force having the particular characteristics deemed desirable. In recruiting workers, employers rely on strategies, such as advertisements in local newspapers and word of mouth, to ensure a localized labor force. Employers' rootedness in the local area and their reluctance to risk losing their current labor force by moving far reinforce the spatial divisions of labor they themselves helped to create through their locational and recruiting strategies. Employees, for their part, contribute to carving out small-scale labor markets through a preference for short journeys to work, a reliance on personal contacts in finding jobs, and through residential rootedness in particular parts of the metropolitan area. The sometimes microscopic labor markets that develop as a result have distinctive characteristics in terms of employment opportunities and wage levels. A geographic perspective shows that labor markets emerge from processes far more complex than economic exchange.

地方劳动力市场劳动力市场分割雇主空间策略空间劳动分工