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Jeanne Cilliers . Photo

Jeanne Cilliers

Researcher

Jeanne Cilliers . Photo

Occupational mobility during South Africa's industrial take-off

Author

  • Jeanne Cilliers
  • Johan Fourie

Summary, in English

In the absence of historical income or education data, the change in occupations over time can be used as a measure of mobility. This paper investigates intergenerational occupational mobility using a novel genealogical dataset for settler South Africa, spanning its transition from an agricultural to an early industrialised society (1800-1909). We identify fathers and sons for whom we have complete information on occupational attainment. We follow a two-generation discrete approach to measure changes in both absolute and relative mobility over time. Consistent with qualitative evidence of a shift away from agriculture as the economy’s dominant sector, we see the farming class shrinking and the skilled and professional classes growing. Controlling for changes in the structure of the labour market over time, we find increasing mobility, becoming significant after the discovery of minerals in 1868. We find this mobility particularly for semiskilled workers but virtually no improved mobility for sons of farmers. We also test hypotheses related to the mobility prospects for first-born sons and sons of immigrants.

Department/s

  • Department of Economic History

Publishing year

2018

Language

English

Pages

3-22

Publication/Series

South African Journal of Economics

Volume

86

Issue

1

Document type

Journal article

Publisher

Wiley-Blackwell

Topic

  • Economic History

Keywords

  • intergenerational mobility
  • occupational mobility
  • resource curse
  • industrialisation
  • colonialism
  • J60
  • J61
  • J62
  • N30
  • N37

Status

Published

ISBN/ISSN/Other

  • ISSN: 0038-2280