To read this content please select one of the options below:

Covid-19 heterogeneous effects on Italian workers’ incomes: the role of jobs routinization and teleworkability

Giovanni Gallo (University of Modena and Reggio Emilia, Modena, Italy)
Silvia Granato (European Commission, Joint Research Centre (JRC), Ispra, Italy)
Michele Raitano (Department of Economics and Law, Sapienza University of Rome, Rome, Italy)

International Journal of Manpower

ISSN: 0143-7720

Article publication date: 29 April 2024

Issue publication date: 29 August 2024

87

Abstract

Purpose

The Covid-19 pandemic appears to have engendered heterogeneous effects on individuals’ labour market prospects. This paper focuses on two possible sources of a heterogeneous exposition to labour market risks associated with the pandemic outbreak: the routine task content of the job and the teleworkability. To evaluate whether these dimensions played a crucial role in amplifying employment and wage gaps among workers, we focus on the case of Italy, the first EU country hit by Covid-19.

Design/methodology/approach

Investigating the actual effect of the pandemic on workers employed in jobs with a different degree of teleworkability and routinization, using real microdata, is currently unfeasible. This is because longitudinal datasets collecting annual earnings and the detailed information about occupations needed to capture a job’s routine task content and teleworkability are not presently available. To simulate changes in the wage distribution for the year 2020, we have employed a static microsimulation model. This model is built on data from the Statistics on Income and Living Conditions (IT-SILC) survey, which has been enriched with administrative data and aligned with monthly observed labour market dynamics by industries and regions.

Findings

We measure the degree of job teleworkability and routinization with the teleworkability index (TWA) built by Sostero et al. (2020) and the routine-task-intensity index (RTI) developed by Cirillo et al. (2021), respectively. We find that RTI and TWA are negatively and positively associated with wages, respectively, and they are correlated with higher (respectively lower) risks of a large labour income drop due to the pandemic. Our evidence suggests that labour market risks related to the pandemic – and the associated new types of earnings inequality that may derive – are shaped by various factors (including TWA and RTI) instead of by a single dimension. However, differences in income drop risks for workers in jobs with varying degrees of teleworkability and routinization largely reduce when income support measures are considered, thus suggesting that the redistributive effect of the emergency measures implemented by the Italian government was rather effective.

Originality/value

No studies have so far investigated the effect of the pandemic on workers employed in jobs with a different degree of routinization and teleworkability in Italy. We thus investigate whether income drop risks in Italy in 2020 – before and after income support measures – differed among workers whose jobs are characterized by a different degree of RTI and TWA.

Keywords

Acknowledgements

Restrictions apply to the availability of the data used under a license from Fondazione Brodolini for this study. Data are available from the authors upon reasonable request and with the permission of Fondazione Brodolini only. Michele Raitano thanks Fondazione Brodolini for granting access to the AD-SILC dataset. The authors thank Sara Flisi, Dario Guarascio, Giulia Santangelo and participants in the AIEL Annual Conference for providing useful comments and suggestions.

Citation

Gallo, G., Granato, S. and Raitano, M. (2024), "Covid-19 heterogeneous effects on Italian workers’ incomes: the role of jobs routinization and teleworkability", International Journal of Manpower, Vol. 45 No. 7, pp. 1326-1349. https://doi.org/10.1108/IJM-08-2023-0474

Publisher

:

Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2024, Emerald Publishing Limited

Related articles