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Changes in the Labor Market and Occupational Prestige Scores
Author(s) -
Hara Junsuke
Publication year - 2000
Publication title -
international journal of japanese sociology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.133
H-Index - 15
eISSN - 1475-6781
pISSN - 0918-7545
DOI - 10.1111/j.1475-6781.2000.tb00074.x
Subject(s) - prestige , occupational prestige , ideology , industrialisation , demographic economics , suspect , occupational mobility , order (exchange) , aside , economics , labour economics , political science , psychology , sociology , demography , politics , law , market economy , socioeconomic status , art , population , philosophy , linguistics , literature , finance
  In spite of the great changes in the structures of industry as well as work and occupation in postwar Japan as a result of rapid industrialization, occupational prestige scores as an index of people's evaluation of occupations did not reveal the corresponding changes. They maintained consistent stability since the mid 1950s aside from parallel upward movements, which might be a result of the permeation of an egalitarian ideology. Three kinds of occupational prestige scores calculated from data in the SSM survey of 1955, 1975 and 1995 had very high correlation with each other. The scores also showed a strong correlation between levels of education and income for each occupation, and no relation with labor market situation. And the unchanged order of occupations in Japan might be one of the reasons for the stability. The fact that people's evaluation of occupations revealed by prestige scores has scarcely changed and such scores has been associated with differences in the level of education makes us suspect that Japan's “credentialism” might be weakened in the near future.

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