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A growing trend toward knowledge work in Canada
Authors:Marie Lavoie  Richard RoyPierre Therrien
Institution:a Department of Economics, Glendon College, York University, York Hall, Room C-129, 2275 Bayview Avenue, Toronto, Ont., Canada M4N 3M6
b Applied Research Branch, Human Resources Development Canada, Toronto, Hull, Que., Canada K1A 0S9
c Marketplace Innovation, Industry Canada, Ottawa, Ont., Canada K1A 0H5
Abstract:This paper answers three questions related to the growing trend toward knowledge occupations in Canada: (i) What was the magnitude of the trend between 1971 and 1996? (ii) Was the trend a widespread phenomenon or was it restricted to specific industries? (iii) What are the proximate causes of the trends? Using five censuses—1971, 1981, 1986, 1991, 1996—and the input/output (I/O) data, the paper provides evidence that the Canadian economy is becoming increasingly knowledge-based, although the upgrading trends differ across knowledge occupations. Moreover, we find that this phenomenon is spread across all industrial sectors. Finally, using a decomposition analysis borrowed from Wolff and Baumol, three factors—the substitution effect, the productivity-lag effect and the demand effect—have been examined in order to shed some light on these trends. We find that these effects vary according to the nature of the knowledge involved in these different groups of occupations, thus reflecting not only the importance of the technological change ‘skill bias’ but also the increasing complexity of controlling and managing the new economic activities.
Keywords:Knowledge-based economy  Employment trends  Technological change  Knowledge occupations  Decomposition analysis  Productivity growth
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