Equalising the effects of automation? The role of task overlap for job finding

Publication date

2025-10

Authors

Dabed, DiegoISNI 000000051803525X
Genz, SabrinaORCID 0000-0003-1114-5785ISNI 0000000506581982
Rademakers, EmilieISNI 0000000492957271

Editors

Advisors

Supervisors

Document Type

Article
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License

cc_by

Abstract

This paper investigates whether task overlap can equalise the distributional effects of automation for unemployed job seekers displaced from routine jobs. Using a language model, we establish a novel job-to-job task similarity measure. Exploiting the resulting job network to define job markets flexibly, we find that only the most similar jobs affect job finding. Since automation-exposed jobs overlap with other highly exposed jobs, task-based reallocation provides little relief for affected job seekers. We show that this is not true for more recent software exposure, for which task overlap lowers the inequality in job finding.

Keywords

Automation, Job network, Occupational reallocation, Task overlap, Unemployment, Economics and Econometrics, Organizational Behavior and Human Resource Management

Citation

Dabed, D, Genz, S & Rademakers, E 2025, 'Equalising the effects of automation? The role of task overlap for job finding', Labour Economics, vol. 96, 102766. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.labeco.2025.102766