Are you familiar with the different colors of employment sectors in our society?
Do you know how to distinguish a blue collar job to green collar job or a white collar job to pink collar job?
Below are some information that can help you figure their distinctions.
Blue Collar Jobs
Blue Collar jobs refer to jobs that perform manual labor and receive an hourly rate of pay. The term blue collar stems from the blue fabrics or uniforms worn by many industrial workers.
A blue collar job also referred to blue collar worker. The work may be skilled or unskilled and is often within an industry that is governed by a labor union. Skill trades require education for a number of positions.
The jobs involve automotive manufacturing, construction trades, mechanical work, maintenance, repair industry, technical installations, food industry, electrical and mining.
The payment that a worker receives may be equal to white collar job but they are often uncapable of benefits such as vacation leave, health care and bonuses.
Green Collar Jobs
Green-Collar Workers or Green Jobs benefit the environment in terms of reducing waste and pollution and sustaining natural resources. Green jobs bring a community to a cleaner path and energy efficient future.
In general, Green-Collar workers satisfy the demand for green development. They implement environmentally conscious design, policy, and technology to improve conservation, sustainability and clean renewable.
Green collar workers include environmental consultants, electricians who install solar panels, green building architects, solar energy and wind energy engineers and installers, nuclear engineers, organic farmers, environmental lawyers and ecology educators or other workers involved in clean, renewable, sustainable future energy development.
As stated, US President Barack Obama promises to spend $150 billion to create millions of new green-collar jobs in America.
White Collar Jobs
White Collar Jobs, also known as white collar workers involve salaried professionals, clerical workers, sales, advertising, customer service, administrative and managerial occupations. They perform in an office environment, which is the opposite of blue collar jobs.
These jobs are usually considered to be career-level vocations and are still encouraged to wear actual white collars or fabrics.
Pink Collar Jobs
A Pink Collar Job is traditionally for women. The difference between a white collar job and pink collar job lies on gender.
Pink Collar Jobs involves occupations such as teacher, secretary, nanny, nurse, cosmetologist, maid, receptionist, waitress, florist and flight attendant.
These jobs are mostly performed in a clean and safe environment, which are not expose to dangers or hard physical work. These careers did not required workers much professional trainings unlike white collar professions.
6 comments :
I didn't know there were blue, green and pink collar jobs. I have to admit, I chuckled at 'florist' and 'flight attendant'. That's about as generalized and borderline-sexist as it gets.
Interesting. Thank you for enlightening me.
Michael.
Do you hate it too?
"If you're going through Hell, keep going."
Holy Holism!
Hello, Michael! Thank you for your comments.
Interesting that you say the only difference between White Collar and Pink Collar is gender. Then go on to say that pink collar jobs don't require much education. I intend to launch a website with the focus on Pink Collar, to be called the Pink Collar Society. With the emphasis being that Pink Collar is different than White Collar in gender only :) Business owner, VP, CEO, Secretary, Manager...who cares? I do - that you're a woman that is! LOL Let's make Pink Collar something to aspire to in 2010, heh?
Thanks, Charlene! You're such a keen reader. Yeah, I put emphasis on 'gender'. But, I didn't say or write that it is the 'ONLY' difference between the white collar and pink collar jobs. Good luck to your new website. It will be really interesting. Yeah, Pink Collar for 2010! I'm with you! =)
You're wrong about the "pink collar" job description. You need to get a degree at university to become a nurse. And for your information, a hospital is not a clean environment, nor is it a "safe" place. Nursing involved a lot of manual labour as well. Whoever wrote this is obviously uneducated and ignorant or has a very archaic way of thinking.
Teachers need a lot of training, and schools are not necessarily clean or safe either.
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