Title
Layoffs and Lemons
Author(s)
Robert Gibbons Robert Gibbons (MIT and NBER)
Lawrence F. Katz Lawrence Katz (Harvard University and NBER)
Abstract
In this paper we provide theoretical and empirical analyses of an asymmetric-information model of layoffs in which the current employer is better informed about its workers' abilities than prospective employers are. The key feature of the model is that when firms have discretion with respect to whom to lay off, the market infers that laid-off workers are of low ability. Since no such negative inference should be attached to workers displaced in a plant closing, our model predicts that the post- displacement wages of otherwise observationally equivalent workers will be higher for those displaced by plant closings than for those displaced by layoffs. A simple extension of our model predicts that the post- displacement unemployment duration of otherwise observationally equivalent workers will be lower for those displaced by plant closings than for those displaced by layoffs. In our empirical work, we use data from the Displaced Workers Supplements in the January l984 and 1986 Current Population Surveys. For our whole sample, we find that the evidence (with respect to both re-employment wages and post-displacement unemployment duration) is consistent with the idea that laid-off workers are viewed less favorably by the market than are those losing jobs in plant closings. Furthermore, our findings are much stronger for workers laid-off from jobs where employers have discretion over whom to lay off, and much weaker for workers laid-off from jobs where employers have little or no discretion over whom to lay off.
Creation Date
1989-04
Section URL ID
IRS
Paper Number
249
URL
https://dataspace.princeton.edu/bitstream/88435/dsp01bg257f06q/1/249.pdf
File Function
Jel
G2, G20
Keyword(s)
layoffs, unemployment, wages, asymmetric information, displaced workers
Suppress
false
Series
1