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Published byWhitney Atkinson Modified over 9 years ago
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Canadian Career Development Foundation
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“Labour Market Attachment” (LMA) is used quite broadly, but is not well defined It would seem that LMA is a significant input in an “input-process-outcome” model * All info here is based on Donnalee Bell’s “Labour market attachment: Defining the spectrum between the employed and the inactive”, a 2012 literature review on LMA for CCDF’s Employability Dimensions study.
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What is LMA? What does it mean to adhere, affix or append to the labour market? Is it like glue – either sticks or doesn’t? A magnet – can attract with varying strength? A nut and bolt that, once connected in some way, just needs to be tightened up? A relationship, full of human foibles?
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Do clients entering career and employment services with low LMA fare worse than those with high LMA?
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Canada ◦ LMA means “working or providing services in the labour market for remuneration, on a full-time, part-time, seasonal or temporary basis, either as an employee or in Self-Employment” UK ◦ LMA is a “concept relating to a person’s proximity to the labour force. It covers a spectrum from fully attached workers (e.g. those in employment or International Labour Organization’s [ILO’s] unemployment) at the one extreme, to those who do not want a job at the other extreme. The latter group, which includes economically inactive retired people, might be considered completely detached from the labour market”
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Spain ◦ LMA is “the change in workers’ labour market state, as established by their situation at predetermined moments of time, which range from unemployment (or inactivity) to employment through a permanent contract”
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Each definition is based on ILO definitions of employment ◦ ILO’s approach to the labour force: The labour force is made up of the employed and the unemployed (want a job, looking for a job, ready to start); everyone else is economically inactive or unattached There is a spectrum of attachment Within this spectrum, the underemployed need to be included Specific social groups may be differentially attached
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Employed UPW: Under-employed part-time workers Unemployed PSIA: Persons seeking but not immediately available PAWNS: Persons available but not seeking Inactive
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LMA approaches look at a snapshot of surface status vis-à-vis the labour market (e.g., “unemployed and looking”), but this tells us little about actual attachment – its nature, depth or strength Imagine studying “relationship attachment” and measuring only: Not dating; not looking Not dating; will be soon Not dating; looking Dating; looking Dating; not looking
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Labour Market Status E.g., de la Fuente’s 6-point scale Socio-Economic Factors E.g., education, literacy, family care responsibility, external supports, housing, criminal record Non-Cognitive or Personal Attribute Factors E.g., motivation, goal orientation, self-efficacy, locus of control, perseverance, self-regulation
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How useful is the idea of LMA? ◦ Even if we could measure it with an LMAI, would we? ◦ What difference would it make to our practice? If useful, how should it be defined? How does the “status – SES – attribute” combination add to our understanding of LMA? ◦ Or, is this broader approach simply a measure of “work salience”? ◦ Or, are SES and Attributes simply predictors of LMA rather than components of LMA?
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