Job loss and labour market adjustment in the Canadian economy
by Garnett Picot and Ted Wannell
Business and Labour Market Analysis Division
Analytical Studies Branch research paper series, No. 005
This paper assesses the labour market adjustment experiences of Canadian
workers who were permanently laid off between 1981 and 1984. Such lay-offs
could be due to structural or cyclical causes. Data from a special survey
are used to answer a number of questions.
What types of workers were most likely to experience job loss and in
which industries or occupations did they work? What happened to these
workers when their jobs were abolished? Did they adjust relatively quickly
and successfully, finding new jobs in a short time at the same income
level? Or did a significant number spend long periods seeking new jobs
and undergo large pay cuts? How many turned to retraining or relocation
in an attempt to find a new job? Were there major movements among industrial
sectors in the process (say from manufacturing to services), and how
did workers who made such a transition fare?
Circumstances varied tremendously from one worker to another. Nearly
one-quarter of the workers who found new jobs did so within three weeks,
while 10% took more than one year. Of those finding new jobs, 55% found
jobs paying higher wages, 45% took pay cuts in their new jobs. On the
whole, however, these permanently laid off workers fared poorly compared
to the rest of the labour force. Their unemployment rate in January,
1986 (the time of the survey) was 25%, more than double the national
average. Even among workers with considerable experience in the lost
job (3 years or more), the unemployment rate was 24%.
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