FrançaisEnglish

Érudit | Dépôt de documents >
CRISES - Centre de recherche sur les innovations sociales >
Cahiers du CRISES, collection Études théoriques >

Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item:

https://depot.erudit.org//id/001633dd

Title: Different strokes for differents folks : examining the effects of computerization on Canadian workers
Authors: Lavoie, Marie
Therrien, Pierre
Issue Date: 2004-02
Publisher: Centre de recherche sur les innovations sociales
Series/Report no.: Études théoriques
Abstract: Computerization (the diffusion of a combination of hardware and software) has accelerated in the last 30 years due to advances in electronic technologies, the advent of the microprocessor and the tremendous development of the software industry. The process of codification has intensified and routine tasks have tended to disappear, changing the architecture of jobs and, therefore, the structure of employment. A number of occupations have become increasingly associated with the computer, and these jobs require highly skilled workers. Using a production function framework, we found that computerization is not labour-saving but is instead labour-using. Despite this general trend, important inter-industrial differences prevail in the association of skills patterns with the computer. By transforming the structure of jobs, the computer has changed the skills requirements: the knowledge, management and data category of workers is closely associated with the use of computers while for good workers the relationship is a substitutive one due to expert systems software. The computer because of the highly tacit nature of the tasks does not affect the service category of workers. Though the uniqueness of the computer revolution should not be exaggerated, the computer has certainly acted as a catalyst given its pervasiveness and its capacity to merge with other technologies.
URI: https://depot.erudit.org/id/001633dd
Appears in Collections:Cahiers du CRISES, collection Études théoriques

Files in This Item:

ET0403.pdf (Adobe PDF ; 180.12 kB)

Items in the Repository are protected by copyright, with all rights reserved, unless otherwise indicated.

 

About Érudit | Subscriptions | RSS | Terms of Use | Contact us |

Consortium Érudit ©  2016