• Initially, China is likely to specialise mainly in relatively low-skilled labour-intensive manufacturing, whereas developed economies will concentrate on activities needing higher skills.

    ECONOMIST: The halo effect | The

  • The recent uptick in earnings at the bottom is a blip in an otherwise long downward trend in the market for low-skilled labour.

    ECONOMIST: Out of sight, out of mind

  • The first stage in the cycle is that of factor-driven economies which focus on low-cost basic factor conditions, such as low-skilled labour, natural resources and geographic location.

    BBC: Business

  • Even before the recession, which will wreak lasting havoc on their earning power and trust in government, the market had ceased rewarding diligent, low-skilled labour with reasonable pay and benefits.

    ECONOMIST: It��s tougher than it appears for the millennial generation

  • Mind you big box stores are still labour intensive, the only difference is, instead of a lot of people owning and running their own stores one entity owns and runs the place with low-skilled labour from the pool of people who have been run out of business.

    FORBES: Wiping Out Millions of Jobs is the Whole Darn Point

  • Governments fret that stronger currencies would make exports less competitive, but they would also encourage firms to shift upmarket from low-skilled to higher-skilled labour, which is essential for long-term prosperity.

    ECONOMIST: Asian currencies

  • Developed economies have lots of skilled workers, whereas emerging economies have lots of low-skilled ones, so according to the theory advanced countries will specialise in capital-intensive products requiring skilled labour and emerging economies in low-tech products.

    ECONOMIST: More pain than gain

  • It remains highly fragmented, under-capitalised, labour intensive and predominantly low-skilled: not the ideal position to be in as the business heads south.

    ECONOMIST: Restaurants

  • Better incentives might encourage low-skilled men to return to the labour market.

    ECONOMIST: America's jobless men: Decline of the working man | The

  • Ever more low-skilled white American men have left the labour force, many moving onto disability rolls.

    ECONOMIST: The United States: The rich and the rest | The

  • More recently, and more sensibly, Sweden has cut taxes on labour, especially for the low-skilled.

    ECONOMIST: A bit more unequal, a lot more efficient

  • They suggest how the low-skilled workers left behind might be helped by further reforms in the labour market as well as by better education and training.

    ECONOMIST: What has work become?

  • China still has perhaps 200m underemployed rural workers who could move to factories over the next two decades, so wages for low-skilled workers are rising more slowly than productivity, reducing China's unit labour costs.

    ECONOMIST: More pain than gain

  • In seasonal work and construction, cheap foreign labour can depress wages and make it harder for the low-skilled to find work, but the flexibility and willingness of new workers can also boost productivity and encourage innovation.

    ECONOMIST: Immigration

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