The project is in its fifth year of using quantitative longitudinal surveys to trace the experiences and transitions of workers – including former OEM employees, those who remain in firms previously in the supply chain, and those made redundant from the supply chain. These surveys record work (including identifying which occupations and industries workers are moving to) and non-work activities, and collect social, health and household data. Analysis has and will identify personal, household and labour market factors and include validated instruments for measuring well-being and finances.
We have conducted qualitative interviews with a subset of workers to identify perceived impediments to re-employment and to understand the impacts of job loss on imagined futures.
For a subset of workers we have conducted discrete choice experiments on workers’ labour market expectations and decisions. This has been a world-first application of this technique for understanding the real-world choices and constraints faced by individuals affected by a large-scale redundancy.
The research investigates how plant closures affects communities and the ways in which they can best respond to an economic shock. It draws on recent thinking about local leadership to better understand who are the key enablers of positive change when a major closure or job shedding or redundancies is announced.