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How the Internet is Transforming Employment
Daily Policy Digest

Economic Issues / Technology and Productivity

Thursday, October 31, 2002
The Internet has profoundly affected labor markets, according to a study by Harvard University economist Richard B. Freeman.

  • Using government data from 1998 through 2001, Freeman found that workers who used the Internet on the job worked 5 percent longer hours than those who didn't -- although he could not state whether the extra hours worked were productive.
  • He also found that people who use the Internet at work get paid more -- although that advantage will probably decline as more workers go on line.
  • In 1997, only 17 percent of workers ages 18 to 65 used the Internet at work -- but by 2001, the proportion had jumped to 41 percent.
  • A person in Russia or India has the same access to American job listings as someone in the United States -- and since the Web allows workers to do business from their homes, there is little to stop foreign workers from taking an "American job" without even moving there.
Freeman also sees the Internet transforming how labor unions operate -- making it easier to entice new members and sell workers on their services.

Source: Margaret Popper, "Economic Trends: Doing a Job on Labor," Business Week, October 28, 2002.

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