The spread of digital technologies across labor markets is doing more than automating tasks. It is actively sorting workers into two poles: those with high-level cognitive and digital skills, and those trapped in low-wage, low-security employment. This paper examines how skill polarization in the digital economy produces uneven human capital outcomes, with particular attention to what happens in hybrid economies, where formal and informal labor coexist alongside digital and traditional production systems. Drawing on established theories of skill-biased technological change, task-based models of labor demand, and human capital theory, the paper traces how middle-skill employment has eroded across both developed and developing economies. It also draws attention to trust deficits that emerge inside workplaces when digital transitions are managed poorly, including how algorithmic management, surveillance-linked remote work, and exclusionary upskilling programs breed resentment and disengage workers. The paper closes with a set of concrete advisories for workplace managers, covering transparent communication, inclusive skill development, participatory governance, and psychological safety, with practical guidance on how to put each advisory to work.
Yue et al. (Fri,) studied this question.
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