English

China's First Workforce Skill Taxonomy

General Economics 2020-01-10 v1 Economics

Abstract

China is the world's second largest economy. After four decades of economic miracles, China's economy is transitioning into an advanced, knowledge-based economy. Yet, we still lack a detailed understanding of the skills that underly the Chinese labor force, and the development and spatial distribution of these skills. For example, the US standardized skill taxonomy O*NET played an important role in understanding the dynamics of manufacturing and knowledge-based work, as well as potential risks from automation and outsourcing. Here, we use Machine Learning techniques to bridge this gap, creating China's first workforce skill taxonomy, and map it to O*NET. This enables us to reveal workforce skill polarization into social-cognitive skills and sensory-physical skills, and to explore the China's regional inequality in light of workforce skills, and compare it to traditional metrics such as education. We build an online tool for the public and policy makers to explore the skill taxonomy: skills.sysu.edu.cn. We will also make the taxonomy dataset publicly available for other researchers upon publication.

Cite

@article{arxiv.2001.02863,
  title  = {China's First Workforce Skill Taxonomy},
  author = {Weipan Xu and Xiaozhen Qin and Xun Li and Haohui"Caron" Chen and Morgan Frank and Alex Rutherford and Andrew Reeson and Iyad Rahwan},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2001.02863},
  year   = {2020}
}

Comments

20 pages, 4 figures

R2 v1 2026-06-23T13:06:40.021Z