Worker specialization and the consequences of occupational decline

Published: 26 May 2025

Author: Simon Ek, And

Are workers with poor outside opportunities less responsive and more susceptible to negative demand shifts in routine occupations? To answer this, I create and estimate an occupation specialization index (OSI) using Swedish register data and machine Learning tools. It measures the expected utility difference between a worker’s occupation and his best outside option. This determines the loss he is willing to tolerate to avoid switching. Low-OSI generalists disproportionately left routine work. Their future wage growth was comparable to similar workers initially in non-routine occupations. By contrast, routine specialists largely stayed put and experienced lower wage growth than generalists and non-routine specialists.

Contact

IFAU-Working paper 2025:7 "Worker specialization and the consequences of occupational decline" is written by Simon Ek at IFAU. For more information contact Simon, e-mail:simon.ek@ifau.uu.se