occupational structure This refers to the aggregate distribution of occupations in society, classified according to skill level, economic function, or social status. The occupational structure is shaped by various factors: the structure of the economy (the relative weight of different industries); technology and bureaucracy (the distribution of technological skills and administrative responsibility); the labour-market (which determines the pay and conditions attached to occupations); and by status and prestige (influenced by occupational closure, life-style, and social values). It is difficult to attach causal primacy to any one of these factors; moreover, their role in shaping the occupational structure changes over time, as society changes. For example, during the early phase of European industrialization, the dominance of manufacturing made for a preponderance of manual occupations, while in recent times the shrinking of this sector, together with the growth in services, has made for an expansion of white-collar occupations. The distinction between manual and non-manual occupations has also become blurred.
The occupational structure is described and analysed by means of various classificatory schemes, which group similar occupations together according to specific criteria such as skill, employment status, or function. Such classifications are also used as a basis for the empirical analysis of economic and social class
primary 3% secondary 17% tertiary 80%
Secondary and tertiary
Primary: 33% Secondary: 15% Tertiary: 52% Same as Philipenis'
secondary
Primary>Secondary relies on secondary to buy the output so it can be processed into finished goods Secondary>Primary relies on primary to extract raw materials for them to process Secondary>Tertiary relies on tertiary to distribute their finished goods to consumers/customers Tertiary>Secondary relies on secondary to supply finished goods for them to sell Primary>Tertiary relies on tertiary to distribute and market their goods to both secondary and consumers Tertiary>Primary relies on primary to use their services and thus provide a source of revenue
tertiary
primary 3% secondary 17% tertiary 80%
primary, secondary, tertiary, and quaternary
Secondary and tertiary
secondary
First there's primary, then secondary and after that there's the tertiary colors. For example: Primary - Yellow Tertiary - Yellow-orange Secondary - Orange Tertiary - Orange-red Primary - Red Tertiary - Red-purple Secondary - Purple Tertiary - Purple-blue Primary - Blue Tertiary - Blue-green Secondary- Green Tertiary - Green-yellow Primary - Return to Yellow
14% primary, 47% secondary, 28% tertiary and 11% Quatary
Primary: 33% Secondary: 15% Tertiary: 52% Same as Philipenis'
secondary
asda is secondary
primary-81% secondary-3% tertiary-16% (includes quaternary industry which is 6% of the tertiary 16%
tertiary