Economic Geography
From unemployment to non-employment
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Economic and social geography
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- From ‘quantity’ to ‘quality’ of employment
From unemployment to non-employment
In the days of ‘slack’ labour markets, job loss and unemployment were key concerns for researchers concerned with labour market geographies. Over time, 240 Anne Green however, unemployment has come to account for an ever-smaller proportion of non-employment. A range of different data sources have confirmed that unemploy- ment has become an increasingly unreliable measure of labour reserve, and even more importantly from a geographical perspective, the ‘more difficult’ the local labour market, the smaller proportion of non-employment that unemployment captures, and the larger the share accounted for by long-term sickness (Mackay 1999). As conventional measures of unemployment have depressed the degree of spatial variation in labour reserve, so labour market analysts have been advo- cated the use of broader measures of non-employment (Green and Owen 1998) and the focus of policy attention has shifted increasingly to the inactive (who typi- cally are more heterogeneous than the unemployed – since they include those looking after the home and family, who suffer sickness/disability, students, etc.). From ‘quantity’ to ‘quality’ of employment In contrast to ‘quantitative’ concerns about ‘mass unemployment’ in the mid 1980s, with a ‘tightening’ of labour markets there has been a shift towards greater policy emphasis on ‘qualitative’ aspects of employment, and on the role of skills as a key driver in regional competitiveness (the promotion of the ‘healthy’ labour market concept also reflects this trend). As a result the geography of occupations and skills has risen up the policy agenda. Geographers in private sector consultancy have been particularly influential and active here in entering and shaping the policy debate and making their results accessible and informative to policymakers. Local Futures’ Regional Economic Architecture (Hepworth and Spencer 2003) adopts a four-fold knowledge-intensity classification to map and measure the demand- and supply-side of the regional geography of the knowledge economy in Britain, utilising an effective ‘on one page’ display and colour coding to indicate regional performance vis-à-vis the national average. This presentation is effective in highlighting key messages, such as the role of London as a knowl- edge economy hub and the importance of the public sector as a key driver of the knowledge economy in the North and Midlands. More detailed employment and labour force data at regional and sub-regional levels underpin these ‘top’ level results. Geographers in academia can and do contribute to the policymaking process, but perhaps not as much as they could (Martin 2001). Download 3.2 Kb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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