摘要:Since Adam Smith’s time, the division of labor in production has increased
significantly, while information processing has become an important part of
work. This paper examines whether the need to coordinate an increasingly complex
division of labor has raised the demand for clerical office workers, who process
information that is used to coordinate production. In order to examine this
question empirically, I introduce a measure of the complexity of an industry’s
division of labor that uses the Herfindahl index of occupations it employs,
excluding clerks and managers. Using US data I find that throughout the 20th
century more complex industries employed relatively more clerks, and recent
Mexican data shows a similar relationship. The relative complexity of industries
is persistent over time and correlated across these two countries. I further
document the relationship between complexity and the employment of clerks using
an early information technology (IT) revolution that took place around 1900,
when telephones, typewriters, and improved filing techniques were introduced.
This IT revolution raised the demand for clerks in all manufacturing industries,
but significantly more so in industries with a more complex division of labor.
Interestingly, recent reductions in the price of IT have enabled firms to
substitute computers for clerks, and I find that more complex industries have
substituted clerks more rapidly.
关键词:information processing, division of labor, technological change, organization of
production