Title
Searching for Job Security and the Consequences of Job Loss
Author(s)
Gregor Jarosch Gregor Jarosch (Princeton University)
Abstract
This paper studies a labor market where workers search for both more productive and more secure employment. In this environment, an unemployment spell begets future unemployment spells and the hazard rate into unemployment declines with tenure. In a laissez-faire economy, workers overvalue job security relative to productivity and unemployment benefits can increase welfare. I estimate the framework on German Social Security data and use it to study quantitatively the consequences of job loss. The model explains the large and highly persistent response in wages and employment known as the "unemployment scar." The key driver of the long term losses is the original loss of job security and its interaction with the evolution of human capital.
Creation Date
2015-12
Section URL ID
Paper Number
2015-2
URL
https://drive.google.com/file/d/1YVZz8ow8h3nlSxLUdDIWe3APovPAGNUx/view
File Function
Jel
E24, J30
Keyword(s)
Employment, Job Security, Job Loss
Suppress
false
Series
13