Skilled labor
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Skill is a measure of a worker's expertise, specialization, wages, and supervisory capacity. Skilled workers are generally more trained, higher paid, and have more responsibilities than unskilled workers.1

Skilled workers have long had historical import (see Division of labor) as masons, carpenters, blacksmiths, bakers, brewers, coopers, printers and other occupations that are economically productive. Skilled workers were often politically active through their craft guilds.

References

  1. ^ Cowan, Ruth Schwartz (1997), written at New York, A Social History of American Technology, Oxford University Press, 179, ISBN 0195046056

Further reading

See also

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