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matching – Suchprozesse am Arbeitsmarkt

Offene Stellen bei gleichzeitiger Arbeitslosigkeit - was Arbeitsmarkttheorien u. a. mit "unvollkommener Information" begründen, ist für Unternehmen und Arbeitsuchende oft nur schwer nachzuvollziehen: Unternehmen können freie Stellen nicht besetzen, trotzdem finden Arbeitsuchende nur schwer den passenden Job. Wie gestalten sich die Suchprozesse bei Unternehmen und Arbeitsuchenden, welche Konzessionen sind beide Seiten bereit einzugehen, wie lässt sich das "matching" verbessern?
Diese Infoplattform bietet wissenschaftliche Literatur zur theoretischen und empirischen Auseinandersetzung mit dem Thema.

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  • Literaturhinweis

    How workers and firms meet in the labor market and why it matters (2024)

    Carillo-Tudela, Carlos; Kaas, Leo; Lochner, Benjamin ;

    Zitatform

    Carillo-Tudela, Carlos, Leo Kaas & Benjamin Lochner (2024): How workers and firms meet in the labor market and why it matters. (VoxEU columns / Centre for Economic Policy Research), London, o. Sz.

    Abstract

    "Most firms match with workers through job postings, networks of personal contacts, or the public employment agency. This column investigates the effects of search channels on labor market outcomes in Germany. Low-wage firms and low-wage workers are more likely to match via networks or the public agency, while high-wage firms and high-wage workers succeed more often via job postings. Because search channels connect workers and firms at different rungs of the wage distribution, matching technologies matter not only for individual job search outcomes, but also for aggregate employment, productivity, and wage inequality." (Author's abstract, IAB-Doku, © VOXEU) ((en))

    Beteiligte aus dem IAB

    Lochner, Benjamin ;
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  • Literaturhinweis

    In search of a job—But which one? How unemployed people revise their occupational expectations (2024)

    Demazière, Didier ;

    Zitatform

    Demazière, Didier (2024): In search of a job—But which one? How unemployed people revise their occupational expectations. In: Social Policy and Administration online erschienen am 06.02.2024. DOI:10.1111/spol.13011

    Abstract

    "Conducting a job search implies the identification of a target—an intended job. However, this assumption has been little studied, and just two main conclusions have been drawn, namely: jobseekers have an incentive to adjust their targets to the jobs available, and returning to work tends to lead to occupational downgrading. This article explores how job search experiences shape and alter targets. Biographical interviews were conducted with 57 unemployed people registered with the French public employment service. Ultimately, all of them revise their occupational expectations as, faced with the uncertainties inherent to the job search and experiencing difficulties in reaching their priority targets, they try to adapt and define more realistic goals. Four contrasting processes of expectation revision are used to track these tensions between desirability and realism. In conclusion, we stress the following facts: that unemployed people are flexible and develop rationales in order to adapt to the labour market; that their experience of failure, alongside advice and beliefs arising in the course of the job search feed directly into these revisions, and that these revisions both vary in magnitude and reflect inequalities in the defining process of target jobs." (Author's abstract, IAB-Doku, Published by arrangement with John Wiley & Sons) ((en))

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  • Literaturhinweis

    Declining Search Frictions, Unemployment and Self-Employment (2024)

    Denderski, Piotr; Sniekers, Florian;

    Zitatform

    Denderski, Piotr & Florian Sniekers (2024): Declining Search Frictions, Unemployment and Self-Employment. In: The Economic Journal, Jg. 134, H. 659, S. 1100-1145. DOI:10.1093/ej/uead093

    Abstract

    "In most OECD countries, unemployment rates show no trend, which is puzzling if advancements in information and communication technologies decrease labor-market frictions. We show, both analytically and quantitatively, that accounting for the secular decline in self-employment rates solves the puzzle. While declining labor-market frictions can theoretically explain these trends, we provide contradictory causal evidence that the roll-out of broadband internet has increased self-employment and decreased unemployment rates. We reconcile these observations with a new model featuring frictions in both labour and goods markets. We explain falling self-employment and non-trending unemployment quantitatively by labor-market frictions declining relatively more than goods-market frictions." (Author's abstract, IAB-Doku) ((en))

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  • Literaturhinweis

    "New Plan", berufliche Weiterentwicklung und die Rolle von Informationen (2024)

    Dohmen, Thomas ; Künn, Steffen; Kleifgen, Eva ; Stephan, Gesine ;

    Zitatform

    Dohmen, Thomas, Eva Kleifgen, Steffen Künn & Gesine Stephan (2024): "New Plan", berufliche Weiterentwicklung und die Rolle von Informationen. (IAB-Forschungsbericht 01/2024), Nürnberg, 33 S. DOI:10.48720/IAB.FB.2401

    Abstract

    "In der sich wandelnden Arbeitswelt reicht es in der Regel nicht mehr aus, einmal im Leben einen Beruf zu erlernen. Oft ist im bisherigen Beruf eine Weiterentwicklung sinnvoll oder sogar erforderlich; eventuelle Berufswechsel erfordern dann häufig den Erwerb neuer Kenntnisse und Fähigkeiten. Um die Chancen und Herausforderungen einschätzen zu können, ist eine gute Informationsbasis erforderlich. Die Bundesagentur für Arbeit (BA) hat im Rahmen ihrer Berufsberatung im Erwerbsleben (BBiE) das Online-Tool New Plan entwickelt. Dieses soll Menschen dabei helfen im Beruf voranzukommen, die eigenen Stärken zu erkennen und neue Perspektiven zu finden. Das Tool besteht aus drei Bereichen: „Möglichkeiten testen“, „Inspirieren lassen“, „Weiterbildung suchen“. Der Bereich „Inspirieren“ stellt dabei auf Berufsebene umfassende Informationen für eine mögliche berufliche Umorientierung zur Verfügung. Dieser Forschungsbericht stellt Ergebnisse aus einer Online-Befragung von Beschäftigten und Personen, die Arbeitslosengeld bezogen, vor. Die Befragung hat unter anderem erhoben, ob Personen New Plan kannten und nutzten, an beruflicher Weiterentwicklung interessiert waren und sich gut über ihre Verdienst- und Beschäftigungsmöglichkeiten informiert fühlten. Der Bericht geht zudem der Frage nach, ob Personen diese Fragen anders beantworteten, wenn sie zuvor ein Informationsschreiben zu New Plan erhalten hatten. Zu der Befragung wurden im Juni 2022 Personen eingeladen, die im Januar 2022 zu einer der folgenden vier Gruppen gehörten: sozialversicherungspflichtig Vollzeitbeschäftigte (einschließlich Personen in Helfertätigkeiten), sozialversicherungspflichtig Vollzeitbeschäftigte in Helfertätigkeiten, Arbeitslosengeldempfänger*innen (einschließlich Personen ohne Berufsabschluss), Arbeitslosengeldempfänger*innen ohne Berufsabschluss. Insgesamt umfasst das hier ausgewertete Analysesample gut 4.400 Personen. Im Ergebnis zeigt sich, dass New Plan den Vollzeitbeschäftigten im Schnitt deutlich seltener bekannt war als den Personen, die zum damaligen Zeitpunkt bzw. davor Arbeitslosengeld bezogen hatten – ohne vorheriges Informationsschreiben betrugen die Anteile rund 2 bzw. 11 Prozent. Der Bekanntheitsgrad von New Plan stieg deutlich, wenn Personen zuvor ein Informationsschreiben erhalten hatten – bei den Vollzeitbeschäftigten und Arbeitslosengeldempfänger*innen nahm der Bekanntheitsgrad jeweils um 14 Prozentpunkte zu. Vollzeitbeschäftigte hatten New Plan ohne vorheriges Informationsschreiben mit 0,3 Prozent anteilig deutlich seltener angeschaut als Arbeitslosengeldempfänger*innen mit 8 Prozent. Hochgerechnet auf die aktuellen Grundgesamtheiten hätten demnach etwa 63.000 Vollzeitbeschäftigte und 61.000 Arbeitslosengeldempfänger*innen New Plan bereits einmal angeschaut. Auch hier zeigt sich, dass das vorher verschickte Informationsschreiben den Anteil der Befragten, der das Tool bereits angeschaut hatte, um etwa 10 Prozentpunkte erhöhen konnte. Die Befragung zeigt auch: Vollzeitbeschäftigte waren – mit knapp zwei Drittel – in etwas geringerem Ausmaß an beruflicher Weiterentwicklung interessiert als Arbeitslosengeldempfänger*innen. Deren Anteil lag hier bei knapp drei Vierteln – relativ unabhängig davon, ob die Befragten vorher ein Informationsschreiben erhalten hatten oder nicht. Die befragten Vollzeitbeschäftigten fühlten sich schließlich zu deutlich mehr als 50 Prozent (eher) gut über ihre Verdienst- und – in etwas höherem Umfang – über ihre Beschäftigungschancen informiert. Auch bei den Arbeitslosengeldempfänger*innen fühlten sich mehr als 50 Prozent (eher) gut informiert, bei wiederum nur geringen Unterschieden zwischen Personen mit oder ohne vorherigem Informationsschreiben." (Autorenreferat, IAB-Doku)

    Beteiligte aus dem IAB

    Kleifgen, Eva ; Stephan, Gesine ;
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  • Literaturhinweis

    Skill mismatch and the costs of job displacement (2024)

    Neffke, Frank ; Wiederhold, Simon; Nedelkoska, Ljubica ;

    Zitatform

    Neffke, Frank, Ljubica Nedelkoska & Simon Wiederhold (2024): Skill mismatch and the costs of job displacement. In: Research Policy, Jg. 53. DOI:10.1016/j.respol.2023.104933

    Abstract

    "Establishment closures have lasting negative consequences for the workers displaced from their jobs. We study how these consequences vary with the amount of skill mismatch that workers experience after job displacement. Developing new measures of occupational skill redundancy and skill shortage, we analyze the work histories of individuals in Germany between 1975 and 2010. We estimate difference-in-differences models, using a sample of displaced workers who are matched to statistically similar non-displaced workers. We find that displacements increase the probability of occupation change eleven-fold. Moreover, the magnitude of post-displacement earnings losses strongly depends on the type of skill mismatch that workers experience in such job switches. Whereas skill shortages are associated with relatively quick returns to the earnings trajectories that displaced workers would have experienced absent displacement, skill redundancy sets displaced workers on paths with permanently lower earnings. We show that these differences can be attributed to differences in mismatch after displacement, and not to intrinsic differences between workers making different post-displacement career choices." (Author's abstract, IAB-Doku, © Elsevier) ((en))

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  • Literaturhinweis

    Arbeitslose im Fokus: Wege zur Fachkräftesicherung (2024)

    Tiedemann, Jurek; Werner, Dirk;

    Zitatform

    Tiedemann, Jurek & Dirk Werner (2024): Arbeitslose im Fokus: Wege zur Fachkräftesicherung. (KOFA kompakt / Kompetenzzentrum Fachkräftesicherung 2024,01), Köln, 5 S.

    Abstract

    "Nicht für alle Arbeitslosen gibt es zum Zeitpunkt ihrer Arbeitssuche eine offene Stelle in ihrem angestrebten oder erlernten Beruf. Der vorliegende KOFA Kompakt beleuchtet die Entwicklung dieses Arbeitslosenüberhangs." (Autorenreferat, IAB-Doku)

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  • Literaturhinweis

    Does Artificial Intelligence Help or Hurt Gender Diversity? Evidence from Two Field Experiments on Recruitment in Tech (2023)

    Avery, Mallory; Vecci, Joseph; Leibbrandt, Andreas;

    Zitatform

    Avery, Mallory, Andreas Leibbrandt & Joseph Vecci (2023): Does Artificial Intelligence Help or Hurt Gender Diversity? Evidence from Two Field Experiments on Recruitment in Tech. (Discussion paper / Monash University, Department of Economics 2023-09), Clayton, 69 S.

    Abstract

    "The use of Artificial Intelligence (AI) in recruitment is rapidly increasing and drastically changing how people apply to jobs and how applications are reviewed. In this paper, we use two field experiments to study how AI in recruitment impacts gender diversity in the male-dominated technology sector, both overall and separately for labor supply and demand. We find that the use of AI in recruitment changes the gender distribution of potential hires, in some cases more than doubling the fraction of top applicants that are women. This change is generated by better outcomes for women in both supply and demand. On the supply side, we observe that the use of AI reduces the gender gap in application completion rates. Complementary survey evidence suggests that this is driven by female jobseekers believing that there is less bias in recruitment when assessed by AI instead of human evaluators. On the demand side, we find that providing evaluators with applicants' AI scores closes the gender gap in assessments that otherwise disadvantage female applicants. Finally, we show that the AI tool would have to be substantially biased against women to result in a lower level of gender diversity than found without AI." (Author's abstract, IAB-Doku) ((en))

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  • Literaturhinweis

    Gender-age differences in hiring rates and prospective wages: Evidence from job referrals to unemployed workers (2023)

    Bamieh, Omar ; Ziegler, Lennart ;

    Zitatform

    Bamieh, Omar & Lennart Ziegler (2023): Gender-age differences in hiring rates and prospective wages. Evidence from job referrals to unemployed workers. In: Labour Economics, Jg. 83. DOI:10.1016/j.labeco.2023.102395

    Abstract

    "This paper uses matched worker-vacancy data to study gender differences in hiring outcomes of jobseekers in Austria. When registered at the public employment office, jobseekers are assigned caseworkers who refer them to suitable vacancies. Our findings show that female and male jobseekers are equally likely to get hired via such a referral, but it takes women longer to get a job offer. Most of the observed gender differences stem from younger jobseekers (below age 35) and are explained by rejections of employers. Young women are also less often hired for better-paying jobs. We argue that these differences are consistent with hiring discrimination against women in their fertile age. Our analysis shows that young female jobseekers are much more likely to go on parental leave in the future, while men almost never take extended parental leave. Consistent with this hypothesis, we find that hiring differences are larger for jobs associated with higher replacement costs and smaller in tight labor markets." (Author's abstract, IAB-Doku, © 2023 Elsevier) ((en))

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  • Literaturhinweis

    Competing for Jobs: How COVID-19 Changes Search Behavior in the Labor Market (2023)

    Bauer, Anja ; Weber, Enzo ; Mamertino, Mariano; Keveloh, Kristin;

    Zitatform

    Bauer, Anja, Kristin Keveloh, Mariano Mamertino & Enzo Weber (2023): Competing for Jobs: How COVID-19 Changes Search Behavior in the Labor Market. In: German Economic Review, Jg. 24, H. 4, S. 323-347., 2023-11-13. DOI:10.1515/ger-2021-0010

    Abstract

    "We provide insights on how job search changed in the Covid-19-crisis by analyzing data from the LinkedIn professional network for Germany. We find that competition among workers for jobs strongly increased – which is due to additional job seekers rather than higher search intensity. Furthermore, the LinkedIn data show that people from industries particularly affected by the crisis applied much more frequently and there had been a substantial shift in the target industries for applications. Finally, we find that at the onset of the Covid-19-crises applications were made significantly more often below and significantly less often above a person’s level of seniority." (Author's abstract, IAB-Doku, © De Gruyter) ((en))

    Beteiligte aus dem IAB

    Bauer, Anja ; Weber, Enzo ;
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  • Literaturhinweis

    Matching Through Search Channels (2023)

    Carillo-Tudela, Carlos; Kaas, Leo; Lochner, Benjamin ;

    Zitatform

    Carillo-Tudela, Carlos, Leo Kaas & Benjamin Lochner (2023): Matching Through Search Channels. (IAB-Discussion Paper 10/2023), Nürnberg, 85 S. DOI:10.48720/IAB.DP.2310

    Abstract

    "Firmen und Arbeitnehmer/-innen finden überwiegend über Stellenanzeigen, persönliche Kontaktnetzwerke oder die Bundesagentur für Arbeit zueinander. All diese Suchkanäle tragen dazu bei, Friktionen am Arbeitsmarkt zu verringern. In diesem Papier untersuchen wir, inwieweit diese Suchkanäle unterschiedliche Auswirkungen auf den Arbeitsmarkt haben. Anhand einer neuen Datenverknüpfung aus administrativer Daten und Umfragedaten zeigen wir: (i) Niedriglohnfirmen und Niedriglohnbeziehende finden vermehrt über Netzwerke oder die Bundesagentur für Arbeit zueinander, währendessen Hochlohnfirmen und Hochlohnbeziehende häufiger über Stellenanzeigen zusammenkommen. (ii) Dabei nutzen Firmen Stellenanzeigen vor allem bei der Abwerbung und Gewinnung von Hochlohnbeziehenden. Im Vergleich zu anderen Suchkanälen, werden Stellenanzeigen auch vermehrt von Beschäftigten beim Aufstieg auf der Karriereleiter genutzt. Um die Auswirkungen dieser Beobachtungen auf die aggregierte Beschäftigung, die Löhne und die Arbeitsmarktsortierung zu bewerten, schätzen wir strukturell ein Gleichgewichtsmodell, das sich durch Karriereleitern, zweiseitige Heterogenität, mehrere Suchkanäle und endogene Einstellungsintensität auszeichnet. Die Schätzung zeigt, dass Netzwerke der kosteneffizienteste Kanal sind, der es Firmen ermöglicht, schnell einzustellen, aber auch Arbeitskräfte mit geringeren durchschnittlichen Fähigkeiten anzuziehen. Stellenanzeigen sind der kostspieligste Kanal, erleichtern die Einstellung von Arbeitnehmern/-innen mit höheren Fähigkeiten und sind für die Sortierung zwischen Beschäftigten und Firmen am wichtigsten. In kontrafaktischen Berechnungen zeigt sich, dass obwohl die Bundesagentur für Arbeit die geringste Einstellungswahrscheinlichkeit bietet, ihre hypothetische Abschaffung beträchtliche Folgen hätte. Die Gesamtbeschäftigung würde um mindestens 1,4 Prozent sinken und die Lohnungleichheit steigen." (Autorenreferat, IAB-Doku)

    Beteiligte aus dem IAB

    Lochner, Benjamin ;
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  • Literaturhinweis

    Matching Through Search Channels (2023)

    Carrillo-Tudela, Carlos ; Lochner, Benjamin ; Kaas, Leo;

    Zitatform

    Carrillo-Tudela, Carlos, Leo Kaas & Benjamin Lochner (2023): Matching Through Search Channels. (CESifo working paper 10761), München, 32 S.

    Abstract

    "Firms and workers predominately match via job postings, networks of personal contacts or the public employment agency, all of which help to ameliorate labor market frictions. In this paper we investigate the extent to which these search channels have differential effects on labor market outcomes. Using novel linked survey-administrative data we document that (i) low-wage firms and low-wage workers are more likely to match via networks or the public agency, while high-wage firms and high-wage workers succeed more often via job postings; (ii) job postings help firms the most in poaching and attracting high-wage workers and help workers the most in climbing the job ladder. To evaluate the implications of these findings for employment, wages and labor market sorting, we structurally estimate an equilibrium job ladder model featuring two-sided heterogeneity, multiple search channels and endogenous recruitment effort. The estimation reveals that networks are the most cost-effective channel, allowing firms to hire quickly, yet attracting workers of lower average ability. Job postings are the most costly channel, facilitate hiring workers of higher ability, and matter most for worker-firm sorting. Although the public employment agency provides the lowest hiring probability, its removal has sizeable consequences, with aggregate employment declining by at least 1.4 percent and rising bottom wage inequality." (Author's abstract, IAB-Doku) ((en))

    Beteiligte aus dem IAB

    Lochner, Benjamin ;
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  • Literaturhinweis

    Matching Through Search Channels (2023)

    Carrillo-Tudela, Carlos ; Kaas, Leo; Lochner, Benjamin ;

    Zitatform

    Carrillo-Tudela, Carlos, Leo Kaas & Benjamin Lochner (2023): Matching Through Search Channels. (CEPR discussion paper / Centre for Economic Policy Research 18575), London, 32 S.

    Abstract

    "Firms and workers predominately match via job postings, networks of personal contacts or the public employment agency, all of which help to ameliorate labor market frictions. In this paper we investigate the extent to which these search channels have differential effects on labor market outcomes. Using novel linked survey-administrative data we document that (i) low-wage firms and low-wage workers are more likely to match via networks or the public agency, while high-wage firms and high-wage workers succeed more often via job postings; (ii) job postings help firms the most in poaching and attracting high-wage workers and help workers the most in climbing the job ladder. To evaluate the implications of these findings for employment, wages and labor market sorting, we structurally estimate an equilibrium job ladder model featuring two-sided heterogeneity, multiple search channels and endogenous recruitment effort. The estimation reveals that networks are the most cost-effective channel, allowing firms to hire quickly, yet attracting workers of lower average ability. Job postings are the most costly channel, facilitate hiring workers of higher ability, and matter most for worker-firm sorting. Although the public employment agency provides the lowest hiring probability, its removal has sizeable consequences, with aggregate employment declining by at least 1.4 percent and rising bottom wage inequality." (Author's abstract, IAB-Doku) ((en))

    Beteiligte aus dem IAB

    Lochner, Benjamin ;
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  • Literaturhinweis

    Matching through Search Channels (2023)

    Carrillo-Tudela, Carlos ; Kaas, Leo; Lochner, Benjamin ;

    Zitatform

    Carrillo-Tudela, Carlos, Leo Kaas & Benjamin Lochner (2023): Matching through Search Channels. (IZA discussion paper / Forschungsinstitut zur Zukunft der Arbeit 16583), Bonn, 37 S.

    Abstract

    "Firms and workers predominately match via job postings, networks of personal contacts or the public employment agency, all of which help to ameliorate labor market frictions. In this paper we investigate the extent to which these search channels have differential effects on labor market outcomes. Using novel linked survey-administrative data we document that (i) low-wage firms and low-wage workers are more likely to match via networks or the public agency, while high-wage firms and high-wage workers succeed more often via job postings; (ii) job postings help firms the most in poaching and attracting high-wage workers and help workers the most in climbing the job ladder. To evaluate the implications of these findings for employment, wages and labor market sorting, we structurally estimate an equilibrium job ladder model featuring two-sided heterogeneity, multiple search channels and endogenous recruitment effort. The estimation reveals that networks are the most cost-effective channel, allowing firms to hire quickly, yet attracting workers of lower average ability. Job postings are the most costly channel, facilitate hiring workers of higher ability, and matter most for worker-firm sorting. Although the public employment agency provides the lowest hiring probability, its removal has sizeable consequences, with aggregate employment declining by at least 1.4 percent and rising bottom wage inequality." (Author's abstract, IAB-Doku) ((en))

    Beteiligte aus dem IAB

    Lochner, Benjamin ;
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  • Literaturhinweis

    On the ambiguity of job search (2023)

    Chan, Ying Tung ; Yip, Chi Man;

    Zitatform

    Chan, Ying Tung & Chi Man Yip (2023): On the ambiguity of job search. In: Economic Inquiry, Jg. 61, H. 4, S. 1006-1033. DOI:10.1111/ecin.13150

    Abstract

    "Who knows the underlying productivity distribution function? Interestingly, this ambiguous function is often referenced to make decisions including job creations, wage determinations, contract formulations, etc. To investigate how ambiguity shapes labor markets, we integrate ambiguity preferences into the Diamond-Mortensen-Pissarides (DMP) model. We find that ambiguity-averse job- and talent-hunters are conservative. Our quantitative analysis indicates that but for the ambiguity, the American unemployment rate would have increased in the postwar era. This paper generalizes the DMP model, enhances our understanding of the labor market, and calls for policies concerning labor market information." (Author's abstract, IAB-Doku, Published by arrangement with John Wiley & Sons) ((en))

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  • Literaturhinweis

    Neuartige Jobempfehlungssysteme können Suchprozesse am Arbeitsmarkt verbessern (2023)

    Fitzenberger, Bernd ; Stops, Michael ; Oberfichtner, Michael ;

    Zitatform

    Fitzenberger, Bernd, Michael Oberfichtner & Michael Stops (2023): Neuartige Jobempfehlungssysteme können Suchprozesse am Arbeitsmarkt verbessern. In: IAB-Forum H. 18.12.2023 Nürnberg. DOI:10.48720/IAB.FOO.20231218.01

    Abstract

    "Neuere, auf maschinellem Lernen basierende Jobempfehlungssysteme sollen Arbeitssuchenden möglichst passende Jobangebote unterbreiten und so die „klassische“ Arbeitsvermittlung und -beratung entlasten oder ergänzen. Die Herausforderungen in der Umsetzung und die Grenzen in der Anwendung sind jedoch in den Blick zu nehmen, um die Potenziale von Jobempfehlungssystemen optimal zu nutzen. Dies zeigen die Erfahrungen mit den Systemen, die derzeit in Dänemark, Frankreich und Schweden erprobt werden." (Autorenreferat, IAB-Doku)

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  • Literaturhinweis

    Finding a job: An intersectional analysis of search strategies and outcomes among U.S. STEM graduates (2023)

    Glass, Jennifer ; Takasaki, Kara; Parker, Emily; Sassler, Sharon ;

    Zitatform

    Glass, Jennifer, Kara Takasaki, Sharon Sassler & Emily Parker (2023): Finding a job: An intersectional analysis of search strategies and outcomes among U.S. STEM graduates. In: Research in Social Stratification and Mobility, Jg. 83. DOI:10.1016/j.rssm.2023.100758

    Abstract

    "Many STEM degree holders, especially women and minorities, are not employed in STEM occupations in the United States, and transitions into the STEM labor force among recent graduates have been declining since the 1980′s. We examine transitions from school to work at two large U.S. universities in 2015–16, focusing on the internship experiences and job search strategies of graduating chemistry and chemical engineering majors. Surprisingly, 28% of our STEM respondents had no post-graduation plans, though women were significantly more likely than men to already have a job. Overall race differences in post-graduation plans were insignificant, though Black and Hispanic students were more likely to have no post-graduation plans compared to Whites and Asians. While Black, Hispanic, and LGBT students reported fewer job search behaviors overall, potentially explaining this pattern, no gender differences in job search behaviors or internship experiences emerged to explain women's employment advantage. However, better grades led to early job offers, reducing most of women's initial hiring advantage along with positive internship experiences, which did not alter men's likelihood of a job offer but were associated with a higher likelihood of a job offer among women." (Author's abstract, IAB-Doku, © 2023 Elsevier) ((en))

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  • Literaturhinweis

    Wie Männer und Frauen sich bei der Jobsuche unterscheiden: Bewerbungsverhalten kann die Hälfte der bereinigten Verdienstlücke erklären (2023)

    Lochner, Benjamin ; Merkl, Christian ;

    Zitatform

    Lochner, Benjamin & Christian Merkl (2023): Wie Männer und Frauen sich bei der Jobsuche unterscheiden: Bewerbungsverhalten kann die Hälfte der bereinigten Verdienstlücke erklären. (IAB-Kurzbericht 8/2023), Nürnberg, 8 S. DOI:10.48720/IAB.KB.2308

    Abstract

    "Frauen verdienen im Durchschnitt weniger als Männer. Dies wird in der Wissenschaft intensiv analysiert und in der Politik oft debattiert. Dabei findet das geschlechtsspezifische Bewerbungsverhalten bisher kaum Beachtung. Die Analyse detaillierter Betriebsdaten zeigt aber, dass sich Männer und Frauen selbst innerhalb eng definierter Berufe auf Stellen mit unterschiedlichen Eigenschaften bewerben und dass dies einen erheblichen Teil der Verdienstlücke erklärt." (Autorenreferat, IAB-Doku)

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    Lochner, Benjamin ;
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  • Literaturhinweis

    Unemployed Job Search across People and over Time: Evidence from Applied-for Jobs (2023)

    Maibom, Jonas; Glenny, Anita; Fluchtmann, Jonas; Harmon, Nikolaj;

    Zitatform

    Maibom, Jonas, Nikolaj Harmon, Anita Glenny & Jonas Fluchtmann (2023): Unemployed Job Search across People and over Time: Evidence from Applied-for Jobs. In: Journal of labor economics online erschienen am 06.04.2023, S. 1-40. DOI:10.1086/725165

    Abstract

    "Using data on applied-for jobs for the universe of Danish UI recipients, we examine variation in job search behavior both across individuals and over time during unemployment spells. We find large differences in the level of applied-for wages across individuals but over time all individuals adjust wages downward in the same way. The decline in applied-for wages over time is descriptively small but economically important in standard models of job search. We find similar results when examining variation in the non-wage characteristics of applied-for jobs and in the search methods used to find them. We discuss implications for theory." (Author's abstract, IAB-Doku) ((en))

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  • Literaturhinweis

    Why Personal Ties (Still) Matter: Referrals and Congestion (2023)

    Mylius, F.;

    Zitatform

    Mylius, F. (2023): Why Personal Ties (Still) Matter: Referrals and Congestion. (Cambridge working papers in economics 2356), Cambridge, 21 S.

    Abstract

    "The internet has reduced search costs significantly, making it much easier to apply for a large number of jobs. In spite of that, the share of jobs found through personal contacts has remained stable over the past decades. My theoretical framework explores a new channel that makes referred candidates favorable for firms: a higher likelihood to accept a job offer. This trait becomes particularly advantageous whenever firms face large uncertainty over whether their candidates would accept their job offer. As we see, if search barriers vanish and workers apply to more firms, a referred candidate expects to face more competitors. On the other hand, with more applications being sent out, workers are, on average, less interested in each firm they apply to, which makes referred candidates stand out more. This means the chances of getting a job offer through a referral can increase if competing workers send out more applications." (Author's abstract, IAB-Doku) ((en))

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  • Literaturhinweis

    Labor Market News and Expectations about Jobs & Earnings (2023)

    Schmidpeter, Bernhard ;

    Zitatform

    Schmidpeter, Bernhard (2023): Labor Market News and Expectations about Jobs & Earnings. (Working paper / Department of Economics, Johannes Kepler Universität of Linz 2023-14), Linz, 30 S.

    Abstract

    "Little is known about how workers update expectations about job search and earnings when exposed to labor market news. To identify the impact of news on expectations, I exploit Foxconn's unexpected announcement to build a manufacturing plant in Racine County. Exposure to positive news leads to an increase in expected salary growth at the current firm. Individuals also revise their expectations about outside offers upward, anchoring their beliefs to Foxconn's announced wages. They act on their updated beliefs with a small increase in current consumption. Negative news from a scaled-down plan leads to a revision of expectations back toward baseline." (Author's abstract, IAB-Doku) ((en))

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  • Literaturhinweis

    Vertical and Horizontal Mismatch in the UK: Are Graduates' Skills a Good Fit for Their Jobs? (2023)

    Vecchi, Michela; Savic, Maja; Robinson, Catherine; Romiti, Marina;

    Zitatform

    Vecchi, Michela, Catherine Robinson, Maja Savic & Marina Romiti (2023): Vertical and Horizontal Mismatch in the UK: Are Graduates' Skills a Good Fit for Their Jobs? (NIESR discussion paper 548), London, 39 S.

    Abstract

    "Understanding the skill mismatch among graduates, its causes and consequences is crucial for an economy as it reveals an inefficient allocation of resources that can lead to a decline in workers' wages and in a country's overall productivity performance. This study contributes to the skill mismatch debate by examining graduates' vertical and horizontal mismatch in the UK. Using the 2017 Annual Population Survey, we introduce a new, objective measure of horizontal mismatch (fit index) and account for skills beyond education. Performance of the fit index is compared with a standard measure of vertical mismatch, that typically refers to graduates employed in non-graduate jobs. We find that approximately 30% of graduates in the UK are employed in non-graduate jobs, while nearly 33% work in fields unrelated to their degree subject. Using information on the skill classification of occupations (SOC2010), we adjust these overall figures controlling for unobservable skills. This allows us to derive six skill groups, each capturing the distance between graduates' skills and those required on the job. At the top of skill distribution, we find graduates who are matched in terms of qualification and skills (44%), followed by those who are only horizontally mismatched, that is those who are employed in an occupation requiring a university degree but whose field of study does not match the requirements of the job (23%). At the bottom of the skill distribution, we find graduates who are overqualified on paper but whose skills are likely to be very close to those required on the job (16%). These graduates are particularly penalized in terms of wages. In fact, our estimates show that they earn approximately 40% less compared to those with a perfect job match. This wage penalty, on the other hand, is substantially lower for graduates who are only horizontally mismatched (approximately 2%). However, although for individuals a pure horizontal mismatch does not impose a strong downward p" (Author's abstract, IAB-Doku) ((en))

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  • Literaturhinweis

    Duration Dependence in Finding a Job: Applications, Interviews, and Job Offers (2023)

    Zuchuat, Jeremy; Zweimüller, Josef; Pesaresi, Lorenzo; Osikominu, Aderonke; Lalive, Rafael;

    Zitatform

    Zuchuat, Jeremy, Rafael Lalive, Aderonke Osikominu, Lorenzo Pesaresi & Josef Zweimüller (2023): Duration Dependence in Finding a Job: Applications, Interviews, and Job Offers. (IZA discussion paper / Forschungsinstitut zur Zukunft der Arbeit 16602), Bonn, 94 S.

    Abstract

    "The job finding rate declines with the duration of unemployment. While this is a well established fact, the reasons are still disputed. We use monthly search diaries from Swiss public employment offices to shed new light on this issue. Search diaries record all applications sent by job seekers, including the outcome of each application – whether the employer followed up with a job interview and a job offer. Based on more than 600,000 applications sent by 15,000 job seekers, we find that job applications and job interviews decrease, but job offers (after an interview) increase with duration. A model with statistical discrimination by firms and learning from search outcomes by workers replicates these empirical duration patterns closely. The structurally estimated model predicts that 55 percent of the decline in the job finding rate is due to "true" duration dependence, while the remaining 45 percent is due to dynamic selection of the unemployment pool. We also discuss further drivers of the observed duration patterns, such as human capital depreciation, stock-flow matching, depletion of one's personal network, and changes in application targeting or quality." (Author's abstract, IAB-Doku) ((en))

    Beteiligte aus dem IAB

    Osikominu, Aderonke;
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  • Literaturhinweis

    The Direct and Indirect Effects of Online Job Search Advice (2022)

    Altmann, Steffen; Sebald, Alexander; Mahlstedt, Robert; Glenny, Anita Marie;

    Zitatform

    Altmann, Steffen, Anita Marie Glenny, Robert Mahlstedt & Alexander Sebald (2022): The Direct and Indirect Effects of Online Job Search Advice. (IZA discussion paper / Forschungsinstitut zur Zukunft der Arbeit 15830), Bonn, 44 S.

    Abstract

    "We study how online job search advice affects the job search strategies and labor market outcomes of unemployed workers. In a large-scale field experiment, we provide job seekers with vacancy information and occupational recommendations through an online dashboard. A clustered randomization procedure with regionally varying treatment intensities allows us to account for treatment spillovers. Our results show that online advice is highly effective when the share of treated workers is relatively low: in regions where less than 50% of job seekers are exposed to the treatment, working hours and earnings of treated job seekers increase by 8.5–9.5% in the year after the intervention. At the same time, we find substantial negative spillovers on other treated job seekers for higher treatment intensities, resulting from increased competition between treated job seekers who apply for similar vacancies." (Author's abstract, IAB-Doku) ((en))

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  • Literaturhinweis

    Do the Long-Term Unemployed Benefit from Automated Occupational Advice during Online Job Search? (2022)

    Belot, Michèle; Muller, Paul; Kircher, Philipp;

    Zitatform

    Belot, Michèle, Philipp Kircher & Paul Muller (2022): Do the Long-Term Unemployed Benefit from Automated Occupational Advice during Online Job Search? (IZA discussion paper 15452), Bonn, 34 S.

    Abstract

    "In a randomized field experiment, we provide personalized suggestions about suitable alternative occupations to long-term unemployed job seekers in the UK. The suggestions are automatically generated, integrated in an online job search platform, and fed into actual search queries. Effects on the primary pre-registered outcomes of “finding a stable job” and “reaching a cumulative earnings threshold” are positive, are significant among those who searched at least once, and are more pronounced for those who are longer unemployed. Treated individuals include more occupations in their search and find more jobs in recommended occupations." (Author's abstract, IAB-Doku) ((en))

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  • Literaturhinweis

    How wage announcements affect job search: a field experiment (2022)

    Belot, Michele; Kircher, Philipp; Muller, Paul;

    Zitatform

    Belot, Michele, Philipp Kircher & Paul Muller (2022): How wage announcements affect job search. A field experiment. In: American Economic Journal. Macroeconomics, Jg. 14, H. 4, S. 1-67. DOI:10.1257/mac.20200116

    Abstract

    "In a field experiment, we study how job seekers respond to posted wages by assigning wages randomly to pairs of otherwise similar vacancies in a large number of professions. Higher wages attract significantly more interest. Still, a nontrivial number of applicants only reveal an interest in the low-wage vacancy. With a complementary survey, we show that external raters perceive higher-wage jobs as more competitive. These findings qualitatively support core predictions of theories of directed/competitive search, though in the simplest calibrated model, applications react too strongly to the wage. We discuss extensions such as on-the-job search that rectify this." (Author's abstract, IAB-Doku) ((en))

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  • Literaturhinweis

    Worker-Firm Screening and the Business Cycle (2022)

    Bradley, Jake ;

    Zitatform

    Bradley, Jake (2022): Worker-Firm Screening and the Business Cycle. (IZA discussion paper 15017), Bonn, 50 S.

    Abstract

    "There has been a substantial body of work modeling the co-movement of employment, vacancies, and output over the business cycle. This paper builds on this literature, and informed by empirical investigation, models worker and firm search and hiring behavior in a manner consistent with recent micro-evidence. Consistent with empirical findings, for a given vacancy, a firm receives many applicants, and chooses their preferred candidate amongst the set. Similarly, workers in both unemployment and employment, can evaluate many open vacancies simultaneously and choose to which they make an application. Business cycles are propagated through turbulence in the economy. Structural parameters of the model are estimated on U.S. data, targeting aggregate time series. The model can generate large volatility in unemployment, vacancies, and worker flows across jobs and employment state. Further, it provides a theoretical mechanism for the shift in the Beveridge curve after the 2008 recession - a phenomenon often referred to as the jobless recovery. That is, persistently low employment after the recession, despite output per worker and vacancies having returned to pre-crisis levels." (Author's abstract, IAB-Doku) ((en))

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  • Literaturhinweis

    Zwischen Selbst- und Fremdbestimmung: Stellensuche digital (2022)

    Böhringer, Daniela;

    Zitatform

    Böhringer, Daniela (2022): Zwischen Selbst- und Fremdbestimmung: Stellensuche digital. In: Sozialer Fortschritt, Jg. 71, H. 6-7, S. 425-446. DOI:10.3790/sfo.71.6-7.425

    Abstract

    "In Deutschland setzt besonders die öffentliche Arbeitsvermittlung auf hohe Automatisierung und Digitalisierung bei der Stellensuche und stellt entsprechende online-Suchmöglichkeiten für Bürger*innen zur Verfügung. Im Text wird der Frage nachgegangen, welche interaktiven Besonderheiten diese Begegnung ‚face-to-screen‘ aufweist. Damit wird die Forschung zu Street-level bureaucrats, die gegenwärtig auf die persönliche Begegnung von Angesicht zu Angesicht fokussiert, erweitert. Die Analyse beruht auf Video-Aufzeichnungen von Nutzungssituationen. Dabei wurden vor allem solche Sequenzen analysiert, in denen deutlich wird, dass Probleme und Irritationen in der Mensch-Maschine-Interaktion auftreten. Die Ergebnisse verweisen auf eine Art interaktiven Bias, auf besondere Interaktionsarbeit auf Seiten der Bürger*innen und Bürger in solchen Begegnungen ‚face-to-screen‘." (Autorenreferat, IAB-Doku)

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  • Literaturhinweis

    JAQ of All Trades: Job Mismatch, Firm Productivity and Managerial Quality (2022)

    Coraggio, Luca; Scognamiglio, Annalisa; Tåg, Joacim; Pagano, Marco;

    Zitatform

    Coraggio, Luca, Marco Pagano, Annalisa Scognamiglio & Joacim Tåg (2022): JAQ of All Trades: Job Mismatch, Firm Productivity and Managerial Quality. (IFN working paper / Research Institute of Industrial Economic 1427), Stockholm, 37 S.

    Abstract

    "Does the matching between workers and jobs help explain productivity differentials across firms? To address this question we develop a job-worker allocation quality measure (JAQ) by combining employer-employee administrative data with machine learning techniques. The proposed measure is positively and significantly associated with labor earnings over workers' careers. At firm level, it features a robust positive correlation with firm productivity, and with managerial turnover leading to an improvement in the quality and experience of management. JAQ can be constructed for any employer-employee data including workers' occupations, and used to explore the effect of corporate restructuring on workers' allocation and careers." (Author's abstract, IAB-Doku) ((en))

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  • Literaturhinweis

    Evidence on Job Search Models from a Survey of Unemployed Workers in Germany (2022)

    DellaVigna, Stefano; Heining, Jörg; Schmieder, Johannes F.; Trenkle, Simon ;

    Zitatform

    DellaVigna, Stefano, Jörg Heining, Johannes F. Schmieder & Simon Trenkle (2022): Evidence on Job Search Models from a Survey of Unemployed Workers in Germany. In: The Quarterly Journal of Economics, Jg. 137, H. 2, S. 1181-1232., 2021-09-11. DOI:10.1093/qje/qjab039

    Abstract

    "Die Wahrscheinlichkeit eine neue Beschäftigung zu finden nimmt für Bezieher von Leistungen aus der Arbeitslosenversicherung in den ersten Monaten der Arbeitslosigkeit zunächst ab, steigt dann aber zum Ende der Bezugsdauer wieder an, um danach erneut abzuflachen. Zahlreiche theoretische Ansätze wurden bisher vorgeschlagen, um dieses Muster zu erklären, jedoch ist dies kaum möglich sofern dafür nur Daten über die Tatsache der Arbeitsaufnahme an sich herangezogen werden. Um die zugrundeliegenden Mechanismen besser zu verstehen, haben wir mittels SMS-Kurznachrichten eine groß angelegte Befragung von Arbeitslosen durchgeführt. Insgesamt wurden über 6.800 Leistungsbezieher zweimal pro Woche über jeweils vier Monate über den zeitlichen Aufwand bei der Suche nach einem neuen Arbeitsplatz befragt. Aufgrund der resultierenden Panelstruktur war es uns nun möglich Erkenntnisse zu sammeln, wie sich dieser zeitliche Aufwand auf individueller Ebene über die Dauer der Arbeitslosigkeit hinweg entwickelt. Unsere drei Hauptergebnisse lauten: 1) Der Suchaufwand verläuft flach zu Beginn der Arbeitslosigkeit. 2) Weiter steigt der Suchaufwand zum Ende der Bezugsdauer an, nimmt im Anschluss daran jedoch wieder ab. 3) Es gibt keine Anzeichen dafür, dass Leistungsbezieher die Aufnahme einer neuen Beschäftigung bewusst an das Ende der Bezugsdauer verzögern. Insbesondere das zweite und das dritte dieser Ergebnisse lassen sich kaum mit den Standardmodellen zur Arbeitssuche basierend auf unbeobachteter Heterogenität bzw. so genannten Storable Offer Modellen erklären. Dagegen können die genannten Ergebnisse gut mittels eines Suchmodells mit Reference Dependence erklärt werden." (Autorenreferat, IAB-Doku)

    Beteiligte aus dem IAB

    Heining, Jörg; Trenkle, Simon ;
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  • Literaturhinweis

    Evaluating Self-Presentation: Gatekeeping Recognition Work in Hiring (2022)

    Keere, Kobe De;

    Zitatform

    Keere, Kobe De (2022): Evaluating Self-Presentation: Gatekeeping Recognition Work in Hiring. In: Cultural sociology, Jg. 16, H. 1, S. 86-110. DOI:10.1177/17499755211032527

    Abstract

    "This study investigates how employee gatekeepers decode cultural signals applicants send out during job selection procedures. By focusing on declarative and non-declarative cultural signals such as leisure activities and presentation style, this article examines how recruiters and hiring managers do their gatekeeping recognition work. This is done by in-depth interviewing of 40 HR managers and recruiters, from the cultural and corporate sector in the Netherlands, using a video-elicitation method. The interviews revealed (1) the importance of a fun-factor, (2) that leisure activities not only serve as status markers or indicators for competence but enter as important interactional tools, (3) that gatekeepers look for authentic self-presentation but that this varies between fields and the perceived gender of the candidate. In addition, the comparative design uncovered significant sector variations. Corporate gatekeepers are characterized by the way they decoded sport activities as a signal for a work mentality, valued self-presentation in terms of representativeness and repeatedly relied on competence as an evaluative principle. Cultural gatekeepers, on the other hand, used leisure activities more often as way of cultural matching and were more drawn to a fun-factor while displaying a clear disdain for formal presentation styles." (Author's abstract, IAB-Doku) ((en))

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  • Literaturhinweis

    Methoden der Stellensuche und Stellensucherfolg: Arbeitsmarktstudie (2022)

    Liechti, David; Suri, Mirjam; Arni, Patrick; Möhr, Thomas; Siegenthaler, Michael ;

    Zitatform

    Liechti, David, Mirjam Suri, Thomas Möhr, Patrick Arni & Michael Siegenthaler (2022): Methoden der Stellensuche und Stellensucherfolg. Arbeitsmarktstudie. (Grundlagen für die Wirtschaftspolitik / Staatssekretariat für Wirtschaft SECO 33), Bern, 104 S.

    Abstract

    "Die Studie setzt sich mit der Frage auseinander, wie beim RAV gemeldete Stellensuchende nach Stellen suchen und was eine erfolgreiche Suche ausmacht. Die Analyse wurde mittels Befragungen von Stellensuchenden (Anmeldungen 2019, bzw. wiederholte Befragung Anmeldungen Mai 2021) sowie Daten der Arbeitslosenstatistik durchgeführt. Im Durchschnitt setzen Stellensuchende wöchentlich etwa 19 Stunden für Bewerbungen ein, etwas weniger als die Hälfte (knapp neun Stunden) werden für die Identifikation von passenden Stellen aufgewendet, die weiteren knapp zehn Stunden werden in das Verfassen von Bewerbungen investiert. Über 95 Prozent der Stellensuchenden nutzen sowohl analoge als auch Online-Suchkanäle. Die Kanäle, welche am häufigsten genutzt werden, sind allgemeine Jobbörsen, Suchmaschinen im Internet, Webseiten von Arbeitgebern, das persönliche Netzwerk sowie Initiativ-bewerbungen. Rund 62 Prozent aller Befragten nutzen arbeit.swiss/Job-Room – die Jobplattform der öffentlichen Arbeitsvermittlung – mehrmals monatlich für die Stellensuche. Die Nutzung der Plattform ist bei Geringqualifizierten und Personen ohne Kenntnisse der Landessprachen bedeutend geringer. Generell selten werden beispielsweise Inserate in Zeitungen als Suchkanal genutzt. Rund drei Viertel der Stellensuchenden nutzen zwischen sieben und elf Kanäle parallel (von zwölf in dieser Studie differenzierten Suchkanälen). Am häufigsten kam der entscheidende Hinweis auf die Stelle, welche angetreten werden konnte, aus dem persönlichen Netzwerk oder die Stelle wurde auf einer allgemeinen Jobbörse identifiziert. Regelmässig werden die Stellensuchenden aber auch von Personalvermittlungsfirmen oder Arbeitgebern direkt kontaktiert und kommen so an eine neue Stelle. Es zeigen sich Auffälligkeiten nach Untergruppen: Stellensuchende ab 55 Jahren nutzen im Vergleich zu jüngeren Stellensuchenden etwas seltener Online-Kanäle, sichten dafür aber häufiger Zeitungsinserate. In Bezug auf den Erfolg von Suchkanälen weichen die älteren Stellensuchenden allerdings nicht vom Durchschnitt ab (die drei erfolgreichsten Kanäle entsprechen denjenigen des Durchschnitts). Weiter sind Personen, welche nicht mindestens eine Landessprache gut beherrschen, mit Jobbörsen im Internet kaum erfolgreich. Da diese Gruppe aber Jobbörsen nicht signifikant seltener nutzt, interpretieren wir dies nicht als Hürde bei der Nutzung, sondern als Hindernis beim Erstellen des Bewerbungsdossiers. Zudem gehen beispielsweise für Initiativbewerbungen bei Hilfsarbeitskräften eine hohe Nutzung und hohe Erfolgsraten einher. Die gewählten Strategien unterscheiden sich kaum zwischen Stellensuchenden, die eine Stelle gefunden haben und solchen, die keine gefunden haben. Die Suchstrategie wird über eine längere Suchdauer teilweise angepasst. Kurzfristig, bzw. in den ersten Monaten der Arbeitslosigkeit, ist die Veränderung allerdings sehr gering (bezüglich Suchintensität und auch Wahl der genutzten Kanäle). Generell scheint es, dass eher das Suchfeld verbreitert wird und keine Anpassungen bezüglich der Wahl der Suchkanäle stattfindet." (Autorenreferat, IAB-Doku)

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    Public employment agency reform, matching efficiency, and German unemployment (2022)

    Merkl, Christian ; Sauerbier, Timo;

    Zitatform

    Merkl, Christian & Timo Sauerbier (2022): Public employment agency reform, matching efficiency, and German unemployment. (FAU Discussion papers in economics 01/2022), Nürnberg, 38 S.

    Abstract

    "Our paper aims at improving the understanding for the role of public employment agencies in job matching. We analyze the effects of the restructuring of the Federal Employment Agency in Germany (Hartz III labor market reform) for aggregate matching and unemployment. Based on two microeconomic datasets, we show that the market share of the Federal Employment Agency as job intermediary declined after the Hartzreforms. We propose a macroeconomic model of the labor market with a private and a public search channel and fit the model to various dimensions of the data. We show that direct intermediation activities of the Federal Employment Agency did not contribute to the decline of unemployment in Germany. By contrast, improved activation of unemployed workers reduced unemployed by 0.7 percentage points." (Author's abstract, IAB-Doku) ((en))

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    Skill Mismatch and the Costs of Job Displacement (2022)

    Neffke, Frank ; Wiederhold, Simon; Nedelkoska, Ljubica ;

    Zitatform

    Neffke, Frank, Ljubica Nedelkoska & Simon Wiederhold (2022): Skill Mismatch and the Costs of Job Displacement. (CESifo working paper 9703), München, 43 S.

    Abstract

    "When workers are displaced from their jobs in mass layoffs or firm closures, they experience lasting adverse labor market consequences. We study how these consequences vary with the amount of skill mismatch that workers experience when returning to the labor market. Using novel measures of skill redundancy and skill shortage, we analyze individuals' work histories in Germany between 1975 and 2010. We estimate difference-in-differences models, using a sample in which we match displaced workers to statistically similar non-displaced workers. We find that displacements increase the probability of occupational change eleven fold, and that the type of skill mismatch after displacement is strongly associated with the magnitude of post-displacement earnings losses. Whereas skill shortages are associated with relatively quick returns to the counterfactual earnings trajectories that displaced workers would have experienced absent displacement, skill redundancy sets displaced workers on paths with permanently lower earnings." (Author's abstract, IAB-Doku) ((en))

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  • Literaturhinweis

    Market Transition and Network-Based Job Matching in China: The Referrer Perspective (2022)

    Obukhova, Elena ; Rubineau, Brian;

    Zitatform

    Obukhova, Elena & Brian Rubineau (2022): Market Transition and Network-Based Job Matching in China: The Referrer Perspective. In: ILR review, Jg. 75, H. 1, S. 200-224. DOI:10.1177/0019793920937234

    Abstract

    "To better understand how network-based job matching responds to market development, the authors investigate network matching in China. They examine this question from the perspective of referrers, those who share information about job opportunities with potential job candidates. Using unique data from a population survey and leveraging interprovincial differences in market development, the authors show that market development has a negative association with individuals’ propensity to share job information. People who work at firms that offer a referral bonus and people who work at private firms, however, are more likely to share information and share it with more people, and the number of such employers increases with market transition. This increase can produce a positive association between market development and overall prevalence of job information-sharing. Results clarify the role employer-side processes play in job information-sharing and carry important implications for understanding network matching." (Author's abstract, IAB-Doku) ((en))

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  • Literaturhinweis

    Occupational Matching and Cities (2022)

    Papageorgiou, Theodore;

    Zitatform

    Papageorgiou, Theodore (2022): Occupational Matching and Cities. In: American Economic Journal. Macroeconomics, Jg. 14, H. 3, S. 82-132. DOI:10.1257/mac.20180122

    Abstract

    "In this paper, I document that workers in larger cities have significantly more occupational options than workers in smaller ones. They are able to form better occupational matches and earn higher wages. I also note differences in occupation reallocation patterns across cities. I develop a dynamic model of occupation choice that microfounds agglomeration economies and captures the empirical patterns. The calibration of the model suggests that better occupational match quality accounts for approximately 35 percent of the observed wage premium and one-third of the greater inequality in larger cities." (Author's abstract, IAB-Doku) ((en))

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  • Literaturhinweis

    Search Costs and Wage Inequality (2022)

    Pi, Jiancai; Zhang, Kaiqi;

    Zitatform

    Pi, Jiancai & Kaiqi Zhang (2022): Search Costs and Wage Inequality. In: The B.E. Journal of Theoretical Economics, Jg. 22, H. 1, S. 67-104. DOI:10.1515/bejte-2019-0168

    Abstract

    "This paper analyzes how search costs affect skilled-unskilled wage inequality. In the basic model, we find that an increase in skilled labor's search costs will decrease wage inequality if the skilled labor market and the unskilled labor market are separated. In the extended model, our findings are as follows: (i) Even if there exists free entry into the unskilled labor market or the endogenous provision of public goods, an increase of search costs in the skilled labor market will decrease wage inequality; and (ii) if skilled search costs are negatively related to the skilled wage, wage inequality will be increased." (Author's abstract, IAB-Doku, © De Gruyter) ((en))

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  • Literaturhinweis

    Demand-side consequences of unemployment and horizontal skill mismatches across national contexts: An employer-based factorial survey experiment (2022)

    Shi, Lulu P. ; Wang, Senhu ;

    Zitatform

    Shi, Lulu P. & Senhu Wang (2022): Demand-side consequences of unemployment and horizontal skill mismatches across national contexts: An employer-based factorial survey experiment. In: Social science research, Jg. 104. DOI:10.1016/j.ssresearch.2021.102668

    Abstract

    "With growing flexibilization in the labour market, continuous and consistent career trajectories have become less the norm, and workers facing unemployment may need to look for employment opportunities outside the occupation they are trained in. But what are their employment chances? And what are the chances of returning to the occupation they were trained in after having worked in a different occupation? Despite much research on how employers evaluate job candidates with vertical skill mismatches (e.g. over-qualification and under-qualification) and unemployment, there is little research to investigate how employers view horizontal mismatch in comparison to unemployment, and whether a combination of both generates multiplicative negative effects. Using data gathered from an employer survey experiment in Switzerland and Greece, we find that in Switzerland both unemployment and horizontal mismatch significantly reduce employment chances, but the scarring effect of horizontal mismatch is much stronger. In contrast, in Greece horizontal mismatch significantly reduces employment chances but unemployment does not. Furthermore, we found that horizontal mismatch scarring is significantly stronger in Switzerland than in Greece. These findings suggest that the scarring effects of both unemployment and horizontal mismatch vary across contexts. Further analyses show that, rather than experiencing multiplicative scarring effects, unemployment does not add further disadvantages to mismatched candidates in either country, highlighting the importance of occupational specificity of skills in labour market matching. Overall, these findings facilitate a more nuanced understanding of demand-side labour market processes, highlighting the distinct interactive effects of unemployment and horizontal mismatch across national contexts." (Author's abstract, IAB-Doku, © 2022 Elsevier) ((en))

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    Nine Mechanisms of Job-Searching and Job-Finding Through Contacts Among Young Adults (2022)

    Vacchiano, Mattia;

    Zitatform

    Vacchiano, Mattia (2022): Nine Mechanisms of Job-Searching and Job-Finding Through Contacts Among Young Adults. In: Sociological research online, Jg. 27, H. 2, S. 361-378. DOI:10.1177/13607804211009525

    Abstract

    "Since Granovetter’s seminal works, the influence of personal networks on the labour market has attracted widespread attention. This article analyses the role played by contacts in the context of the labour trajectories of young people in Spain, for whom the use of personal networks represents one of the most important job-searching methods. Using narrative data extracted from a life-history grid and ego-network generator, the analysis brings to light nine mechanisms in which personal contacts intervene in job-searching and job-finding in a sample of 90 young people living in the Barcelona Metropolitan Area. The article emphasizes that contacts play primarily three roles in these processes as informers, employers, or influencers. This distinction offers a renewed framework for the study of networks in the labour market, further complementing the debate on the strength of ties. Using this framework allows me to create a map of the mechanisms that shed light on personal networks as tools with which to deal with labour insecurity and unemployment among young people, thus providing resources that to a large extent reaffirm the objective character of class differences. The article offers innovative insights into how social capital operates in the labour market and helps understand how youth precarity, which is widespread in Spain, is experienced in a relational way." (Author's abstract, IAB-Doku) ((en))

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    The Determinants of Displaced Workers' Wages: Sorting, Matching, Selection, and the Hartz Reforms (2022)

    Woodcock, Simon;

    Zitatform

    Woodcock, Simon (2022): The Determinants of Displaced Workers' Wages: Sorting, Matching, Selection, and the Hartz Reforms. (Discussion papers / Simon Fraser University, Department of Economics 2022,04), Burnaby, 90 S.

    Abstract

    "We present a simple new method to decompose the wage effects of displacement into components due to differences in the way that displaced and non-displaced workers are sorted across higher- and lower-paying employers (a sorting effect), differences in the quality of worker-employer matches they enter into (a matching effect), and differences in their unobservable characteristics (a selection effect). In an extended application, we apply our decomposition to understand how the determinants of displaced workers' wages in Germany changed following the 2003-2005 Hartz reforms. We find that the wages of displaced workers fell substantially after the reforms, and that over 80 percent of the decline was because they found re-employment at lower-paying employers. Sorting into worse matches explains a smaller 5-9 percent of the wage decline experienced by men, and 12-23.5 percent of the female wage decline. Collectively, the sorting and matching channels explain almost all of the post-reform decline in displaced workers' wages, and selection played little role." (Author's abstract, IAB-Doku) ((en))

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    Job Search during a Pandemic Recession: Survey Evidence from the Netherlands (2021)

    Balgová, Mária; Trenkle, Simon ; Zimpelmann, Christian ; Pestel, Nico;

    Zitatform

    Balgová, Mária, Simon Trenkle, Christian Zimpelmann & Nico Pestel (2021): Job Search during a Pandemic Recession: Survey Evidence from the Netherlands. (IZA discussion paper 14180), Bonn, 36 S.

    Abstract

    "This paper studies job search behavior in the midst of a pandemic recession. We use long-running panel data from the Netherlands (LISS) and complement the core survey with our own COVID-specific module, conducted in June 2020, surveying job search effort of employed as well as unemployed respondents. We estimate an empirical model of job search over the business cycle over the period 2008-2019 to explore the gap between predicted and actual job search behavior in 2020. We find that job search during the pandemic recession differs strongly from previous downturns. The unemployed search significantly less than what we would normally observe during a recession of this size, while the employed search mildly more. Expectations about the duration of the pandemic seem to play a key role in explaining job search effort for the unemployed in 2020. Furthermore, employed subjects affected by changes in employment status due to COVID-19 are more likely to search for a job. Conversely, beliefs about infection risk do not seem to be related to job search in a systematic way." (Author's abstract, IAB-Doku) ((en))

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    Trenkle, Simon ;
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    Job search intensity of unemployed Workers and the business cycle (2021)

    Bransch, Felix ;

    Zitatform

    Bransch, Felix (2021): Job search intensity of unemployed Workers and the business cycle. In: Economics Letters, Jg. 205, S. 1-4. DOI:10.1016/j.econlet.2021.109927

    Abstract

    "This paper provides empirical evidence for the cyclicality in the job search intensity of unemployed workers using data on job search behavior from the Dutch National Bank Household Survey (DHS), an annual panel survey, for the years 1993 until 2018. I find that job search intensity is counter-cyclical, adding to the mixed results of prior studies that mainly rely on data from the US. This finding is robust to using different measures of search intensity and business cycle indicators. The counter-cyclical pattern seems to be driven by changes in the composition of searchers." (Author's abstract, IAB-Doku, © 2021 Elsevier) ((en))

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    Will Accepting Less Bring Success? Job Related Concessions and Welfare Recipients in Germany (2021)

    Christoph, Bernhard ; Lietzmann, Torsten;

    Zitatform

    Christoph, Bernhard & Torsten Lietzmann (2021): Will Accepting Less Bring Success? Job Related Concessions and Welfare Recipients in Germany. In: The social policy blog H. 22.06.2021.

    Abstract

    "It is often argued that in order to find new employment, the unemployed have to compromise and accept jobs that are inferior (e.g. paying less or requiring a lower qualification) than the jobs they held before becoming unemployed. Making such compromise to find new employment is what we call a job related concession. Our results show that while there might be some truth to this Assertion - in particular with regard to accepting lower paying Jobs - being generally flexible with regard to job search has comparably positive effects without requiring the unemployed to make such compromise. Therefore, we argue that enabling the unemployed to find new occupational perspectives - ideally in combination with training and qualification measures for the new occupation - should be at least as promising as requiring them to make job-related concessions." (Text excerpt, IAB-Doku) ((en))

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    Christoph, Bernhard ; Lietzmann, Torsten;

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    Does the internet increase the job finding rate?: Evidence from a period of expansion in internet use (2021)

    Denzer, Manuel; Schank, Thorsten ; Upward, Richard ;

    Zitatform

    Denzer, Manuel, Thorsten Schank & Richard Upward (2021): Does the internet increase the job finding rate? Evidence from a period of expansion in internet use. In: Information economics and policy, Jg. 55. DOI:10.1016/j.infoecopol.2020.100900

    Abstract

    "We examine the impact of household access to the internet on job finding rates in Germany during a period (2006–2009) in which the share of households with a broadband connection increased by 31 percentage points, and job-seekers increased their use of the internet as a search tool. During this period, household access to broadband internet was almost completely dependent on the availability of a particular technology (DSL). We therefore exploit the variation in DSL availability across municipalities as an instrument for household access to the internet. OLS estimates which control for differences in individual and local area characteristics suggest a job finding advantage of about six percentage points. The IV estimates are substantially larger, but much less precisely estimated. However, we cannot reject the hypothesis that, conditional on observables, residential computer access with internet was as good as randomly assigned with respect to the job finding rate. The hypothesis that residential internet access helped job-seekers find work because of its effect on the job search process is supported by the finding that residential internet access greatly increased the use of the internet as a search method. We find some evidence that household access to the internet reduced the use of traditional job search methods, but this effect is outweighed by the increase in internet-based search methods." (Author's abstract, IAB-Doku) ((en))

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  • Literaturhinweis

    Contagious Unemployment (2021)

    Engbom, Niklas;

    Zitatform

    Engbom, Niklas (2021): Contagious Unemployment. (NBER working paper 28829), Cambridge, MA, 46, 24 S.

    Abstract

    "Recent micro evidence of how workers search for jobs is shown to have critical implications for the macroeconomic propagation of labor market shocks. Unemployed workers send over 10 times as many job applications in a month as their employed peers, but are less than half as likely per application to make a move. I interpret these patterns as the unemployed applying for more jobs that they are less likely to be a good fit for. During periods of high unemployment, it consequently becomes harder for firms to assert who is a good fit for the job. By raising the cost of recruiting, a short-lived adverse shock has a persistent negative impact on the job finding rate. I provide evidence that firms spend more time on recruiting when unemployment is high, quantitatively consistent with the theory." (Author's abstract, IAB-Doku) ((en))

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    Recruiting Intensity, Hires, and Vacancies: Evidence from Firm-Level Data (2021)

    Forsythe, Eliza; Weinstein, Russell ;

    Zitatform

    Forsythe, Eliza & Russell Weinstein (2021): Recruiting Intensity, Hires, and Vacancies: Evidence from Firm-Level Data. (IZA discussion paper 14138), Bonn, 42 S.

    Abstract

    "We investigate employer recruiting behavior, using detailed firm-level data from a national survey of employers hiring recent college graduates. We show employers adjust recruiting effort, hiring standards, and compensation with the business cycle, beliefs about tightness, and their own hiring plans. We then show that firms expending greater recruiting effort hire more individuals per vacancy. The results suggest that when firms want to increase hires they adjust vacancies and recruiting intensity per vacancy, which may help explain the breakdown in the standard matching function during the Great Recession. Our measure of recruiting effort explains roughly 16% of the residual elasticity of the vacancy yield with respect to hires." (Author's abstract, IAB-Doku) ((en))

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    "Are you in the right job?" Human Capital Mismatch in the UK (2021)

    Galanakis, Yannis;

    Zitatform

    Galanakis, Yannis (2021): "Are you in the right job?" Human Capital Mismatch in the UK. (GLO discussion paper / Global Labor Organization 976), Essen, 58 S.

    Abstract

    "This paper examines a problem of worker misallocation into jobs. A theoretical model, allowing for heterogeneous workers and firms, shows that job search frictions generate mismatch between employees and employers. In the empirical analysis, the British Household Panel Survey (BHPS), the UK household Longitudinal Study (UKHLS) and British Cohort Study 1970 (BCS70) data are used to measure the incidence of mismatch, how it changes over time and whether it can be explained by unobserved ability. Results show that (i) the incidence of mismatch increases after the Great Recession. (ii) Individual transitions to/from matching take place due to workers' occupational mobility and over-time skills development. (iii) Employees can find better jobs or their mobility occurs earlier than the aggregate change of skills. (iv) Controlling for individual heterogeneity, measured by cognitive and non-cognitive skill test scores throughout childhood, does not decrease the incidence of mismatch. This suggests that unobserved productivity does not generate mismatch in the labour market." (Author's abstract, IAB-Doku) ((en))

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    The role of headhunters in wage inequality: It's all about matching (2021)

    Gorn, Alexey;

    Zitatform

    Gorn, Alexey (2021): The role of headhunters in wage inequality: It's all about matching. In: Review of Economic Dynamics, Jg. 40, S. 309-346. DOI:10.1016/j.red.2020.10.006

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    Does Online Search Improve the Match Quality of New Hires? (2021)

    Gürtzgen, Nicole; Berg, Gerard J. van den; Lochner, Benjamin ; Pohlan, Laura ;

    Zitatform

    Gürtzgen, Nicole, Benjamin Lochner, Laura Pohlan & Gerard J. van den Berg (2021): Does Online Search Improve the Match Quality of New Hires? (IAB-Discussion Paper 02/2021), Nürnberg, 66 S.

    Abstract

    "Die Studie untersucht den Effekt der Expansion des Breitbandinternets auf die Matchqualität neu eingestellter Personen. Hierzu werden Daten zur regionalen Internetverfügbarkeit mit administrativen Individualdaten und Vakanzdaten für den deutschen Arbeitsmarkt kombiniert. Die Ergebnisse zeigen, dass eine Ausweitung der Breitbandinternet-Verfügbarkeit keinen größeren Einfluss auf die Stabilität und Entlohnung neu begonnener Beschäftigungsverhältnisse hat. Diese Resultate werden auf Basis von Analysen mit Vakanzdaten bestätigt. Diese Daten erlauben einen expliziten Vergleich der Matchqualität von Personen, die online rekrutiert wurden, mit der Matchqualität von Personen, die über andere Rekrutierungskanäle eingestellt wurden. Weiterhin zeigen die Ergebnisse, dass Online-Rekrutierung nicht nur die Anzahl der Bewerbungen und den Anteil ungeeigneter Bewerbungen erhöht, sondern ebenfalls zu einer höheren Anzahl von Vakanzen führt." (Autorenreferat, IAB-Doku)

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    Matching for three: big data evidence on search activity of workers, firms, and employment service (2021)

    Hartl, Tobias ; Weber, Enzo ; Hutter, Christian ;

    Zitatform

    Hartl, Tobias, Christian Hutter & Enzo Weber (2021): Matching for three: big data evidence on search activity of workers, firms, and employment service. (IAB-Discussion Paper 01/2021), Nürnberg, 14 S.

    Abstract

    "Wir generieren Maße für die Suchintensität von Arbeitgebern und Arbeitssuchenden und zum ersten Mal - für die Vermittlungsintensität von Arbeitsagenturen. Zu diesem Zweck greifen wir auf Big Data zu Online-Aktivitäten aus der Online Jobbörse der Bundesagentur für Arbeit und ihrer internen Vermittlungssoftware zurück. Wir verwenden diese Daten, um eine erweiterte Matchingfunktion zu schätzen, bei der der Effizienzparameter mit den Such- und Vermittlungsintensitäten variiert. Die Ergebnisse zeigen, dass alle drei Intensitätsmaße erheblich zur Erklärung der Job-findings-Variation beitragen." (Autorenreferat, IAB-Doku)

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    Hartl, Tobias ; Weber, Enzo ; Hutter, Christian ;
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    The Effects of Letters of Recommendation in the Youth Labor Market (2021)

    Heller, Sara B.; Kessler, Judd B.;

    Zitatform

    Heller, Sara B. & Judd B. Kessler (2021): The Effects of Letters of Recommendation in the Youth Labor Market. (NBER working paper 29579), Cambridge, Mass, 43 S. DOI:10.3386/w29579

    Abstract

    "Youth employment has been near historic lows in recent years, and racial gaps persist. This paper tests whether information frictions limit young people's labor market success with a field experiment involving over 43,000 youth in New York City. We build software that allows employers to quickly and easily produce letters of recommendation for randomly selected youth who worked under their supervision during a summer youth employment program. We then send these letters to nearly 9,000 youth over two years. Being sent a letter generates a 3 percentage point (4.5 percent) increase in employment the following year, with both employment and earnings increases persisting over the two-year follow-up period. By posting our own job advertisement, we document that while treatment youth do use the letters in applications, there is no evidence of other supply-side responses (i.e., no increased job search, motivation, or confidence); effects appear to be driven by the demand side. Labor market benefits accrue primarily to racial and ethnic minorities, suggesting frictions may contribute to racial employment gaps. But improved employment may also hamper on-time high school graduation. Additional evidence indicates that letters help improve job match quality. Results suggest that expanding the availability of credible signals about young workers—particularly for those not on the margin of graduating high school—could improve the efficiency of the youth labor market." (Author's abstract, IAB-Doku) ((en))

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    Cyclicality of labour market search: a new big data Approach (2021)

    Hutter, Christian ;

    Zitatform

    Hutter, Christian (2021): Cyclicality of labour market search: a new big data Approach. In: Journal for labour market research, Jg. 55, 2020-12-11. DOI:10.1186/s12651-020-00283-9

    Abstract

    "This paper exploits big data on online activity from the job exchange of the German Federal Employment Agency and its internal placement-software to generate measures for search activity of employers and job seekers and - as a novel feature - for placement activity of employment agencies. In addition, the average search perimeter in the job seekers’ search profiles can be measured. The data are used to estimate the behaviour of the search and placement activities during the business and labour market cycle and their seasonal patterns. The results show that the search activities of firms and employment agencies are procyclical. By contrast, job seekers’ search intensity shows a countercyclical pattern, at least before the COVID-19 crisis." (Author's abstract, © 2021 Springer) ((en))

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    Hutter, Christian ;
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    Flexible work practices and organizational attractiveness in Germany: The mediating role of anticipated organizational support (2021)

    Kröll, Claudia; Nüesch, Stephan; Foege, J. Nils ;

    Zitatform

    Kröll, Claudia, Stephan Nüesch & J. Nils Foege (2021): Flexible work practices and organizational attractiveness in Germany. The mediating role of anticipated organizational support. In: The International Journal of Human Resource Management, Jg. 32, H. 3, S. 543-572. DOI:10.1080/09585192.2018.1479876

    Abstract

    "This study analyzes how flexible work practices (FWPs) such as flexible work schedules, telecommuting, and sabbaticals affect the organizational attractiveness of companies to job seekers in the German job market. We apply conservation of resource theory to propose that FWPs are positively related to perceived organizational attractiveness. Furthermore, we use organizational support theory to suggest that this link is mediated by job seekers' anticipated organizational support. We test our predictions using two complementary studies among German job seekers: A field study (N = 188) at two job fairs and an online scenario experiment (N = 469). Our findings indicate that flexible work practices, in particular flexible work schedules and sabbaticals, significantly increase organizational attractiveness as perceived by job seekers and that these effects are indeed mediated by anticipated organizational support. Our results further suggest that this link is independent of job seekers' attitudes towards FWPs and that the effect of sabbaticals is stronger than the effect of either flexible work schedules or telecommuting." (Author's abstract, IAB-Doku) ((en))

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    The Geography of Job Creation and Job Destruction (2021)

    Kuhn, Moritz; Qiu, Xincheng; Manovskii, Iourii;

    Zitatform

    Kuhn, Moritz, Iourii Manovskii & Xincheng Qiu (2021): The Geography of Job Creation and Job Destruction. (ECONtribute discussion paper 122), Köln ; Bonn, 45, A-20 S.

    Abstract

    "Spatial differences in labor market performance are large and highly persistent. Using data from the United States, Germany, and the United Kingdom, we document striking similarities in spatial differences in unemployment, vacancies, job finding, and job filling within each country. This robust set of facts guides and disciplines the development of a theory of local labor market performance. We find that a spatial version of a Diamond-Mortensen-Pissarides model with endogenous separations and on-the-job search quantitatively accounts for all the documented empirical regularities. The model also quantitatively rationalizes why differences in job-separation rates have primary importance in inducing differences in unemployment across space while changes in the job-finding rate are the main driver in unemployment fluctuations over the business cycle." (Author's abstract, IAB-Doku) ((en))

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    Unemployment Insurance and Job Search Behavior (2021)

    Marinescu, Ioana ; Skandalis, Daphne;

    Zitatform

    Marinescu, Ioana & Daphne Skandalis (2021): Unemployment Insurance and Job Search Behavior. In: The Quarterly Journal of Economics, Jg. 136, H. 2, S. 887-931. DOI:10.1093/qje/qjaa037

    Abstract

    "How does unemployment insurance (UI) affect unemployed workers’ search behavior? Search models predict that until benefit exhaustion, UI depresses job search effort and increases reservation wages. Over an unemployment spell, search effort should increase up to benefit exhaustion and stay high thereafter. Meanwhile, reservation wages should decrease up to benefit exhaustion and stay low thereafter. To test these predictions, we link administrative registers to data on job search behavior from a major online job search platform in France. We follow over 400,000 workers, as long as they remain unemployed. We analyze the changes in search behavior around benefits exhaustion and take two steps to isolate the individual response to unemployment benefits. First, our longitudinal data allows us to correct for changes in sample composition over the spell. Second, we exploit data on workers eligible for 12–24 months of UI as well as workers ineligible for UI, to control for behavior changes over the unemployment spell that are independent of UI. Our results confirm the predictions of search models. We find that search effort (the number of job applications) increases by at least 50% during the year preceding benefits exhaustion and remains high thereafter. The target monthly wage decreases by at least 2.4% during the year preceding benefits exhaustion and remains low thereafter. In addition, we provide evidence for duration dependence: workers decrease the wage they target by 1.5% over each year of unemployment, irrespective of their UI status." (Author's abstract, IAB-Doku) ((en))

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    On the provision of insurance against search-induced wage fluctuations (2021)

    Michau, Jean-Baptiste ;

    Zitatform

    Michau, Jean-Baptiste (2021): On the provision of insurance against search-induced wage fluctuations. In: The Scandinavian journal of economics, Jg. 123, H. 1, S. 382-414. DOI:10.1111/sjoe.12401

    Abstract

    "Should workers be provided with insurance against search-induced wage fluctuations? To answer this question, I rely on numerical simulations of a model of on-the-job search and precautionary savings. The model is calibrated to low skilled workers in the U.S. The extent of insurance is determined by the degree of progressivity of a non-linear transfer schedule. The fundamental trade-off is that a more generous provision of insurance reduces incentives to search for better paying jobs, which increases the cost of providing insurance. I show that progressivity raises the search intensity of unemployed worker, which reduces the equilibrium rate of unemployment, but lowers the search intensity of employed job seekers, which reduces the output level. I also solve numerically for the optimal non-linear transfer schedule. The optimal policy is to provide little insurance up to a monthly income level of $1350, such as to preserve incentives to move up the wage ladder, and nearly full insurance above $1450. This policy reduces the standard deviation of labor income net of transfers by 34% and generates a consumption-equivalent welfare gain of 0.7%. The absence of private savings does not fundamentally change the shape of the optimal transfer function, but tilts the optimal policy towards more insurance, at the expense of a less efficient allocation of workers across jobs." (Author's abstract, Published by arrangement with John Wiley & Sons) ((en))

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    Unemployment Experts: Governing the Job Search in the New Economy (2021)

    Sheehan, Patrick ;

    Zitatform

    Sheehan, Patrick (2021): Unemployment Experts: Governing the Job Search in the New Economy. In: Work and occupations, Jg. 48, H. 4, S. 470-497. DOI:10.1177/07308884211003652

    Abstract

    "In recent years, sociologists have examined unemployment and job searching as important arenas in which workers are socialized to accept the terms of an increasingly precarious economy. While noting the importance of expert knowledge in manufacturing the consent of workers, research has largely overlooked the experts themselves that produce such knowledge. Who are these experts and what kinds of advice do they give? Drawing on interviews and ethnographic fieldwork conducted at three job search clubs, the author develops a three-fold typology of “unemployment experts”: Job Coaches present a technical diagnosis that centers mastery of job-hunting techniques; Self-help Gurus present a moral diagnosis focused on the job seeker’s attitude; and Skill-certifiers present a human capital diagnosis revolving around the job seeker’s productive capacities. By offering alternative diagnoses and remedies for unemployment, these experts give job seekers a sense of choice in interpreting their situation and acting in the labor market. However, the multiple discourses ultimately help to secure consent to precarious labor markets by drawing attention to a range of individual deficiencies within workers while obfuscating structural and relational explanations of unemployment. The author also finds that many unemployment experts themselves faced dislocations from professional careers and are making creative claims to expertise. By focusing on experts and their varied messages, this paper reveals how the victims of precarious work inadvertently help to legitimate the new employment regime." (Author's abstract, IAB-Doku) ((en))

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    Predicting the self-regulated job search of mature-aged job seekers: The use of elective selection, loss-based selection, optimization, and compensation strategies (2021)

    Watermann, Henriette; Fasbender, Ulrike ; Klehe, Ute-Christine ;

    Zitatform

    Watermann, Henriette, Ulrike Fasbender & Ute-Christine Klehe (2021): Predicting the self-regulated job search of mature-aged job seekers: The use of elective selection, loss-based selection, optimization, and compensation strategies. In: Journal of vocational behavior, Jg. 128. DOI:10.1016/j.jvb.2021.103591

    Abstract

    "Job search is a demanding and often demotivating process, challenging job-seekers' self-regulation. Particularly, mature-aged job seekers face lower reemployment chances – and may benefit from strategies known from the lifespan literature. The current study examined whether and when the use of aging strategies (elective selection, loss-based selection, optimization, and compensation; SOC strategies) can support mature-aged job seekers in their self-regulated job search process (goal establishment and goal pursuit). We collected data from 659 mature-aged job seekers in three countries (Germany, United Kingdom, and United States) at four different times over two months. Results of multi-level modeling showed no support for gain-oriented strategies, namely elective selection (prioritizing one instead of multiple goals) and optimization (investing every effort to reach one's goal). In contrast, loss-oriented strategies, namely loss-based selection (prioritizing or selecting a new goal after a setback) and compensation (using new or previously unused means in the face of obstacles), supported mature-aged job seekers' goal establishment and goal pursuit. Moreover, with increasing age, mature-aged job seekers reported lower reemployment efficacy (the confidence to find a new job), which moderated the relation between compensation with goal pursuit. Compensation was particularly helpful for mature-aged job seekers' goal pursuit in weeks in which they reported lower (vs. higher) reemployment efficacy. These findings highlight the importance of loss-oriented aging strategies as beneficial coping strategies. With regard to practice, the present study speaks to the benefits of SOC strategies and points to the development of interventions targeted toward mature-aged job seekers." (Author's abstract, IAB-Doku, © 2021 Elsevier) ((en))

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    Spatial matching on the urban labor market: estimates with unique micro data (2021)

    Wozniak, Marcin ;

    Zitatform

    Wozniak, Marcin (2021): Spatial matching on the urban labor market: estimates with unique micro data. In: Journal for labour market research, Jg. 55. DOI:10.1186/s12651-021-00293-1

    Abstract

    "In the paper, we investigate spatial relationship on the labor market of Poznań agglomeration (Poland) with unique data on job vacancies. We have developed spatial panel models to assess the search and matching process with a particular focus on spatial spillovers. In general, spatial models may provide different findings than regular panel models regarding returns to scale in matching technology. Moreover, we have identified global spillover effects as well as other factors that impact the job-worker matching. We underline the role of data on job vacancies: the data retrieved from commercial job portals produced much more reliable estimates than underestimated registered data." (Autorenreferat, © 2021 Springer Nature) ((en))

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    Competing for jobs: How COVID-19 changes search behaviour in the labour market (2020)

    Bauer, Anja ; Weber, Enzo ; Mamertino, Mariano; Keveloh, Kristin;

    Zitatform

    Bauer, Anja, Kristin Keveloh, Mariano Mamertino & Enzo Weber (2020): Competing for jobs: How COVID-19 changes search behaviour in the labour market. (IAB-Discussion Paper 33/2020), Nürnberg, 21 S.

    Abstract

    "Bislang ist wenig darüber bekannt, wie die Coronakrise die Suchprozesse auf dem Arbeitsmarkt verändert hat. Durch eine Analyse von Daten aus dem beruflichen Netzwerk LinkedIn für Deutschland erhalten wir Erkenntnisse zu einer Veränderung der Konkurrenz am Arbeitsmarkt, einer Umverteilung von Bewerbungen und einer möglichen Verschiebung in Richtung niedrigerer Karrierestufen. Wir stellen fest, dass der Wettbewerb unter den Arbeitnehmern um Arbeitsplätze stark zugenommen hat. Die Daten lassen den Rückschluss zu, dass dies eher auf zusätzliche Arbeitssuchende als auf eine höhere Suchintensität zurückgeht. Darüber hinaus zeigen die LinkedIn-Daten, dass sich Personen aus von der Krise besonders betroffenen Branchen sehr viel häufiger bewerben und dass sich die Zielbranchen für Bewerbungen erheblich verschoben haben. Schließlich stellen wir fest, dass sich Personen während der Krise deutlich häufiger unterhalb und deutlich seltener oberhalb der eigenen Karrierestufe beworben haben." (Autorenreferat, IAB-Doku)

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    Bauer, Anja ; Weber, Enzo ;
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    Wie die Corona-Krise die Suchprozesse am Arbeitsmarkt beeinflusst (Serie "Corona-Krise: Folgen für den Arbeitsmarkt") (2020)

    Bauer, Anja ; Mamertino, Mariano; Keveloh, Kristin; Weber, Enzo ;

    Zitatform

    Bauer, Anja, Kristin Keveloh, Mariano Mamertino & Enzo Weber (2020): Wie die Corona-Krise die Suchprozesse am Arbeitsmarkt beeinflusst (Serie "Corona-Krise: Folgen für den Arbeitsmarkt"). In: IAB-Forum H. 05.08.2020 Nürnberg, o. Sz., 2020-08-05.

    Abstract

    "Viele Branchen wurden von der Corona-Krise hart getroffen, andere nicht, einige konnten sogar profitieren. Damit ändert sich auch das Suchverhalten am Arbeitsmarkt. Dies zeigt eine Auswertung von Daten des beruflichen Netzwerkes." (Autorenreferat, IAB-Doku)

    Beteiligte aus dem IAB

    Bauer, Anja ; Weber, Enzo ;
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  • Literaturhinweis

    Testing the independence of job arrival rates and wage offers (2020)

    Braun, Christine; Rupert, Peter; Griffy, Benjamin ; Engelhardt, Bryan;

    Zitatform

    Braun, Christine, Bryan Engelhardt, Benjamin Griffy & Peter Rupert (2020): Testing the independence of job arrival rates and wage offers. In: Labour Economics, Jg. 63. DOI:10.1016/j.labeco.2020.101804

    Abstract

    "Is the arrival rate of a job independent of the wage that it pays? We answer this question by testing whether unemployment insurance alters the job finding rate differentially across the wage distribution. To do this, we use a Mixed Proportional Hazard Competing Risk Model in which we classify quantiles of the wage distribution as competing risks faced by searching unemployed workers. Allowing for flexible unobserved heterogeneity across spells, we find that unemployment insurance increases the likelihood that a searcher matches to higher paying jobs relative to low or medium paying jobs, rejecting the notion that wage offers and job arrival rates are independent. We show that dependence between wages and job offer arrival rates explains 9% of the increase in the duration of unemployment associated with unemployment insurance." (Author's abstract, IAB-Doku, © 2020 Elsevier) ((en))

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  • Literaturhinweis

    Job Search and Hiring with Two-sided Limited Information about Workseekers' Skills (2020)

    Carranza, Eliana; Rankin, Neil; Garlick, Robert; Orkin, Kate;

    Zitatform

    Carranza, Eliana, Robert Garlick, Kate Orkin & Neil Rankin (2020): Job Search and Hiring with Two-sided Limited Information about Workseekers' Skills. (Upjohn Institute working paper 328), Kalamazoo, Mich., 70 S. DOI:10.17848/wp20-328

    Abstract

    "We present field experimental evidence that limited information about workseekers’ skills distorts both firm and workseeker behavior. Assessing workseekers’ skills, giving workseekers their assessment results, and helping them to credibly share the results with firms increases workseekers’ employment and earnings. It also aligns their beliefs and search strategies more closely with their skills. Giving assessment results only to workseekers has similar effects on beliefs and search, but smaller effects on employment and earnings. Giving assessment results only to firms increases callbacks. These patterns are consistent with two-sided information frictions, a new finding that can inform design of information-provision mechanisms." (Author's abstract, IAB-Doku) ((en))

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  • Literaturhinweis

    Evidence on job search models from a survey of unemployed workers in Germany (2020)

    DellaVigna, Stefano; Heining, Jörg; Schmieder, Johannes F.; Trenkle, Simon ;

    Zitatform

    DellaVigna, Stefano, Jörg Heining, Johannes F. Schmieder & Simon Trenkle (2020): Evidence on job search models from a survey of unemployed workers in Germany. (IAB-Discussion Paper 13/2020), Nürnberg, 60 S.

    Abstract

    "Die Wahrscheinlichkeit eine neue Beschäftigung zu finden nimmt für Bezieher von Leistungen aus der Arbeitslosenversicherung in den ersten Monaten der Arbeitslosigkeit zunächst ab, steigt dann aber zum Ende der Bezugsdauer wieder an, um danach erneut abzuflachen. Zahlreiche theoretische Ansätze wurden bisher vorgeschlagen, um dieses Muster zu erklären, jedoch ist dies kaum möglich sofern dafür nur Daten über die Tatsache der Arbeitsaufnahme an sich herangezogen werden. Um die zugrundeliegenden Mechanismen besser zu verstehen, haben wir mittels SMS-Kurznachrichten eine groß angelegte Befragung von Arbeitslosen durchgeführt. Insgesamt wurden über 6.800 Leistungsbezieher zweimal pro Woche über jeweils vier Monate über den zeitlichen Aufwand bei der Suche nach einem neuen Arbeitsplatz befragt. Aufgrund der resultierenden Panelstruktur war es uns nun möglich Erkenntnisse zu sammeln, wie sich dieser zeitliche Aufwand auf individueller Ebene über die Dauer der Arbeitslosigkeit hinweg entwickelt. Unsere drei Hauptergebnisse lauten: 1) Der Suchaufwand verläuft flach zu Beginn der Arbeitslosigkeit. 2) Weiter steigt der Suchaufwand zum Ende der Bezugsdauer an, nimmt im Anschluss daran jedoch wieder ab. 3) Es gibt keine Anzeichen dafür, dass Leistungsbezieher die Aufnahme einer neuen Beschäftigung bewusst an das Ende der Bezugsdauer verzögern. Insbesondere das zweite und das dritte dieser Ergebnisse lassen sich kaum mit den Standardmodellen zur Arbeitssuche basierend auf unbeobachteter Heterogenität bzw. so genannten Storable Offer Modellen erklären. Dagegen können die genannten Ergebnisse gut mittels eines Suchmodells mit Reference Dependence erklärt werden." (Autorenreferat, IAB-Doku)

    Beteiligte aus dem IAB

    Heining, Jörg; Trenkle, Simon ;

    Weiterführende Informationen

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  • Literaturhinweis

    Returns to job satisfaction in the presence of horizontal mismatch (2020)

    Ge, Qi; Jordan, Eun Jung; Shen, Leilei; Kim, Myongjin;

    Zitatform

    Ge, Qi, Eun Jung Jordan, Myongjin Kim & Leilei Shen (2020): Returns to job satisfaction in the presence of horizontal mismatch. In: Applied Economics, Jg. 52, H. 27, S. 2913-2930. DOI:10.1080/00036846.2019.1696941

    Abstract

    "In this paper, we study the relationship among horizontal mismatch, job satisfaction and wages using data from the 2013 Scientists and Engineers Statistical Data System (SESTAT). Estimates from 2SLS indicate that 1) field-occupation match in the highest degree has a positive effect on job satisfaction and wages; and 2) controlling for field-occupation matches, job satisfaction has a positive but diminishing effect on wages with a large heterogeneity across different age groups. In addition, we also distinguish between job satisfaction arising from benefits and job satisfaction that is productivity enhancing and find both to have a positive but nonlinear effect on wages." (Author's abstract, IAB-Doku) ((en))

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    Unemployment Fluctuations, Match Quality, and the Wage Cyclicality of New Hires (2020)

    Gertler, Mark; Huckfeldt, Christopher; Trigari, Antonella;

    Zitatform

    Gertler, Mark, Christopher Huckfeldt & Antonella Trigari (2020): Unemployment Fluctuations, Match Quality, and the Wage Cyclicality of New Hires. In: The Review of Economic Studies, Jg. 87, H. 4, S. 1876-1914. DOI:10.1093/restud/rdaa004

    Abstract

    "We revisit the issue of the high cyclicality of wages of new hires. We show that after controlling for composition effects likely involving procyclical upgrading of job match quality, the wages of new hires are no more cyclical than those of existing workers. The key implication is that the sluggish behaviour of wages for existing workers is a better guide to the cyclicality of the marginal cost of labour than is the high measured cyclicality of new hires wages unadjusted for composition effects. Key to our identification is distinguishing between new hires from unemployment versus those who are job changers. We argue that to a reasonable approximation, the wages of the former provide a composition-free estimate of the wage flexibility, while the same is not true for the latter. We then develop a quantitative general equilibrium model with sticky wages via staggered contracting, on-the-job search, and heterogeneous match quality, and show that it can account for both the panel data evidence and aggregate evidence on labour market volatility." (Author's abstract, IAB-Doku) ((en))

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  • Literaturhinweis

    Do ethnicity and sex of employers affect applicants’ job interest?: An experimental exploration (2020)

    Granberg, Mark ; Ottosson, Niklas; Ahmed, Ali ;

    Zitatform

    Granberg, Mark, Niklas Ottosson & Ali Ahmed (2020): Do ethnicity and sex of employers affect applicants’ job interest? An experimental exploration. In: Journal for labour market research, Jg. 54, S. 1-15. DOI:10.1186/s12651-020-00281-x

    Abstract

    "Starting a business is one way out of unemployment for many people. Having a small pool of job applicants may, however, affect the quality of manpower available to employers. This paper reports the results of an experimental study that examined whether job-seekers discriminate against prospective employers based on those employers’ ethnicity and sex. We conducted an experiment with 889 university students, where we presented 10 hypothetical job vacancies in the restaurant sector to the participants. We then asked participants to state their willingness to apply to each job. The ethnicity and sex of the employers were conveyed through employers’ names by using typical male and female Arabic- and Swedish-sounding names. Overall, our results provided no evidence of ethnic or sex discrimination by job-seekers against employers." (Author's abstract, IAB-Doku) ((en))

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  • Literaturhinweis

    Wie die regionale Mobilität von Jugendlichen zur Besetzung von Ausbildungsplätzen beiträgt (2020)

    Herzer, Philip; Ulrich, Joachim Gerd;

    Zitatform

    Herzer, Philip & Joachim Gerd Ulrich (2020): Wie die regionale Mobilität von Jugendlichen zur Besetzung von Ausbildungsplätzen beiträgt. (BIBB-Report 2020,05), Leverkusen, 20 S.

    Abstract

    "Als Folge gestiegener Passungsprobleme zwischen Angebot und Nachfrage auf dem Ausbildungsmarkt hat sich die Zahl der unbesetzten Ausbildungsplätze stark vergrößert. Um die Probleme zu mildern, gilt neben mehr beruflicher Flexibilität eine höhere regionale Mobilität der Jugendlichen als eine der Schlüsselgrößen. Der BIBB-Report untersucht, wie sich die bislang gezeigte Mobilität der Jugendlichen auf die Ausbildungsmärkte vor Ort auswirkt. Dabei wird im Gegensatz zu früheren Darstellungen nicht die Perspektive der Jugendlichen, sondern die der Betriebe eingenommen. Es zeigt sich, dass Mobilität bislang vor allem die Rekrutierungschancen der Betriebe in Großstädten erhöht. In eher ländlichen Regionen im Umfeld der Großstädte kommt es dagegen oft zu Verschlechterungen. Vor diesem Hintergrund wird diskutiert, in welcher Weise die Mobilität der Jugendlichen weiter gefördert werden kann, um den ausbildungswilligen Betrieben mehr Nachfrage zu verschaffen." (Autorenreferat, IAB-Doku)

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  • Literaturhinweis

    The German job search panel (2020)

    Hetschko, Clemens ; Schmidtke, Julia ; Stephan, Gesine ; Schöb, Ronnie ; Lawes, Mario ; Eid, Michael ;

    Zitatform

    Hetschko, Clemens, Julia Schmidtke, Michael Eid, Mario Lawes, Ronnie Schöb & Gesine Stephan (2020): The German job search panel. (OSF preprints), 2020-04-23. DOI:10.31219/osf.io/7jazr

    Abstract

    "This report introduces the German Job Search Panel, a longitudinal survey that follows people who register as job seeking over the course of up to two years. The focus of the survey is on job seekers’ well-being and health. An innovative survey app is used to allow for frequent measurement every month and for conducting the experience sampling method. The collected data may be linked to administrative records of the Federal Employment Agency, provided that people give their consent. A subsample of surveyed job seekers took part in hair sampling to measure their cortisol levels. In this report, we describe the sampling procedure, adjustments over the recruitment period and the collected data. We moreover examine selective participation in the panel. It turns out that high-skilled workers, young individuals and women were more likely to sign up. Age increases the probability to take part in the hair sampling. People working in East Germany were more likely to consent to the linkage of survey data and administrative records." (Author's abstract, IAB-Doku) ((en))

    Beteiligte aus dem IAB

    Schmidtke, Julia ; Stephan, Gesine ;
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  • Literaturhinweis

    Worker overconfidence: Field evidence and implications for employee turnover and firm profits (2020)

    Hoffman, Mitchell; Burks, Stephen V.;

    Zitatform

    Hoffman, Mitchell & Stephen V. Burks (2020): Worker overconfidence: Field evidence and implications for employee turnover and firm profits. In: Quantitative Economics, Jg. 11, H. 1, S. 315-348. DOI:10.3982/QE834

    Abstract

    "Combining weekly productivity data with weekly productivity beliefs for a large sample of truckers over 2 years, we show that workers tend to systematically and persistently overpredict their productivity. If workers are overconfident about their own productivity at the current firm relative to their outside option, they should be less likely to quit. Empirically, all else equal, having higher productivity beliefs is associated with an employee being less likely to quit. To study the implications of overconfidence for worker welfare and firm profits, we estimate a structural learning model with biased beliefs that accounts for many key features of the data. While worker overconfidence moderately decreases worker welfare, it also substantially increases firm profits." (Author's abstract, IAB-Doku) ((en))

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  • Literaturhinweis

    Steigert sinnstiftende Arbeit die Bereitschaft zum Lohnverzicht? (2020)

    Kesternich, Iris ; Siflinger, Bettina; Schwarz, Stefan ; Schumacher, Heiner;

    Zitatform

    Kesternich, Iris, Heiner Schumacher, Stefan Schwarz & Bettina Siflinger (2020): Steigert sinnstiftende Arbeit die Bereitschaft zum Lohnverzicht? In: IAB-Forum H. 08.10.2020 Nürnberg, o. Sz., 2020-10-07.

    Abstract

    "Dass die meisten Menschen ihre Arbeit auch als sinnstiftend erleben möchten, ist wenig überraschend. Doch welchen Stellenwert hat dieser Wunsch im Vergleich zu anderen Kriterien wie Gehalt oder Arbeitsplatzsicherheit? Sind Menschen bereit, für mehr Sinnhaftigkeit auf einen Teil ihres Gehalts zu verzichten? Und unterscheiden sich Arbeitslose und Beschäftigte in dieser Hinsicht? Zu guter Letzt: Sind Menschen, die einer sinnstiftenden Arbeit nachgehen, produktiver?" (Autorenreferat, IAB-Doku)

    Beteiligte aus dem IAB

    Schwarz, Stefan ;
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    The Fundamental Surplus or the Fundamentality of Vacancy Posting Costs? (2020)

    Kiarsi, Mehrab;

    Zitatform

    Kiarsi, Mehrab (2020): The Fundamental Surplus or the Fundamentality of Vacancy Posting Costs? In: Economics Bulletin, Jg. 40, H. 2, S. 1011-1016.

    Abstract

    "In a recent influential paper, Ljungqvist and Sargent (2017) suggest that beneath the large responses of unemployment to movements in productivity in the various proposed reconfigurations of the standard Mortensen and Pissarides model is simply the small size of the fundamental surplus fraction. I show that the fundamental surplus fraction is small if and only if the per-vacancy posting cost is small." (Author's abstract, IAB-Doku) ((en))

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  • Literaturhinweis

    Benefit Duration, Job Search Behavior and Re-Employment (2020)

    Lichter, Andreas; Schiprowski, Amelie;

    Zitatform

    Lichter, Andreas & Amelie Schiprowski (2020): Benefit Duration, Job Search Behavior and Re-Employment. (CESifo working paper 8194), München, 32 S.

    Abstract

    "This paper studies how the potential duration of unemployment benefits affects individuals’ job search behavior and re-employment outcomes. We exploit an unexpected reform of the German unemployment insurance scheme in 2008, which increased the potential benefit duration from 12 to 15 months for recipients of age 50 to 54. Based on detailed survey data and difference-in-differences techniques, we estimate that one additional month of benefits reduces the number of filed applications by around 10% on average over the first two months of unemployment. Treatment effects on the reservation wage are positive but statistically insignificant. In a complementary analysis, we use social security data to investigate how the reform affected re-employment outcomes. The difference-in-differences estimates yield an elasticity of 0.24 (0.1) additional months in unemployment (nonemployment) per additional month of potential benefits. A cautious back-of-the-envelope calculation reveals substantial returns to early search effort." (Author's abstract, IAB-Doku) ((en))

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  • Literaturhinweis

    Measuring spatial mismatch and job access inequity based on transit-based job accessibility for poor job seekers (2020)

    Liu, Dong ; Kwan, Mei-Po;

    Zitatform

    Liu, Dong & Mei-Po Kwan (2020): Measuring spatial mismatch and job access inequity based on transit-based job accessibility for poor job seekers. In: Travel behaviour and society, Jg. 19, S. 184-193. DOI:10.1016/j.tbs.2020.01.005

    Abstract

    "The few spatial mismatch studies that have examined spatial mismatch based on job accessibility consider travel time as the sole travel impedance. However, travel cost (e.g., fuel cost, parking fee and transit fare) is also an important factor in determining job accessibility especially for poor job seekers and needs to be integrated into job accessibility measure, because socially vulnerable people including poor job seekers could be disadvantaged by high travel cost (e.g., poor job seekers discouraged from using transit services for commuting due to high fare). By focusing on transit-based job accessibility, this study seeks to improve the assessment of spatial mismatch based on job accessibility by taking transit fare into account and determine the inequity in job accessibility for poor job seekers by conducting comparisons across areas and races. Based on a study of the Chicago Metropolitan Area, we first determine the demand for each census tract’s jobs based on a gravity model that integrates both transit-based travel time and transit fare of poor job seekers from other census tracts. Then, we measure the job accessibility for each census tract based on a gravity model considering the attraction of low-pay jobs weighted by job demand and the friction of transit-based travel time and transit fare. Finally, we assess spatial mismatch by comparing the job accessibility of central city poor job seekers against their suburban counterparts and determine the job access inequity for poor job seekers by comparing the results before and after including transit fare across different areas and races. The results show that central city poor job seekers, either before or after including transit fare, do not suffer from spatial mismatch and tend to have higher job accessibility compared to their suburban counterparts. However, the results obtained from including transit fare are quite different from those that considered travel time only, especially with respect to the differences between poor job seekers of different races living in different areas. For policymakers to be fully informed about spatial mismatch, it is important to take both travel time and transit fare into account." (Author's abstract, IAB-Doku) ((en))

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  • Literaturhinweis

    How to retain motivated employees in their jobs? (2020)

    Martin, Ludivine ;

    Zitatform

    Martin, Ludivine (2020): How to retain motivated employees in their jobs? In: Economic and Industrial Democracy, Jg. 41, H. 4, S. 910-953. DOI:10.1177/0143831X17741528

    Abstract

    "This article examines the contribution of human resource management (HRM) and information and communication technologies (ICTs) in the retention of motivated employees. The author uses a representative random sample of private sector employees from Western Europe. The data set contains information on employees' motivations, on-the-job search and workplace environment. The results show that HRM and ICT bundles are positively related to motivations. Being motivated for intrinsic and personal growth reasons decreases the likelihood to search while being motivated for rewards or compulsion reasons increases it. HRM strengthens the likelihood to search in the same way, while ICTs tend to increase the likelihood to search of all employees." (Author's abstract, IAB-Doku) ((en))

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    Immigration, social networks, and occupational mismatch (2019)

    Alaverdyan, Sevak; Zaharieva, Anna ;

    Zitatform

    Alaverdyan, Sevak & Anna Zaharieva (2019): Immigration, social networks, and occupational mismatch. (SOEPpapers on multidisciplinary panel data research at DIW Berlin 1033), Berlin, 48 S.

    Abstract

    "In this study we investigate the link between the job search channels that workers use to find employment and the probability of occupational mismatch in the new job. Our specific focus is on differences between native and immigrant workers. We use data from the German Socio-Economic Panel (SOEP) over the period 2000-2014. First, we document that referral hiring via social networks is the most frequent single channel of generating jobs in Germany; in relative terms referrals are used more frequently by immigrant workers compared to natives. Second, our data reveals that referral hiring is associated with the highest rate of occupational mismatch among all channels in Germany. We combine these findings and use them to develop a theoretical search and matching model with two ethnic groups of workers (natives and immigrants), two search channels (formal and referral hiring) and two occupations. When modeling social networks we take into account ethnic and professional homophily in the link formation. Our model predicts that immigrant workers face stronger risk of unemployment and often rely on recommendations from their friends and relatives as a channel of last resort. Furthermore, higher rates of referral hiring produce more frequent occupational mismatch of the immigrant population compared to natives. We test this prediction empirically and confirm that more intensive network hiring contributes significantly to higher rates of occupational mismatch among immigrants. Finally, we document that the gaps in the incidence of referrals and mismatch rates are reduced among second generation immigrants indicating some degree of integration in the German labour market." (Author's abstract, IAB-Doku) ((en))

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    The role of affective states in potential applicants' evaluations of employer attractiveness (2019)

    Auer, Manfred; Edlinger, Gabriela ; Pfliegensdörfer, Judith; Petry, Tanja;

    Zitatform

    Auer, Manfred, Gabriela Edlinger, Tanja Petry & Judith Pfliegensdörfer (2019): The role of affective states in potential applicants' evaluations of employer attractiveness. In: German journal of human resource management, Jg. 33, H. 4, S. 363-386. DOI:10.1177/2397002219854959

    Abstract

    "What role do emotions play as a job seeker eyes up a potential employer? Our contribution to research into employer attractiveness explores the role that affective states play in potential applicants' subjective perceptions of companies' employer attractiveness in the early phase of job seeking. We adopt a concurrent verbalization approach to inquire into qualified potential applicants' processes of interpreting employer branding material. Based on these data, we provide insights into the neglected role of emotions in research on potential applicants' assessments of the appeal of an organization. The findings from a multistep qualitative data analysis produce the following four propositions: (1) strong emotions influence the outcome of the opinion-making process; (2) negative emotions play a crucial role in potential applicants' evaluations of employer attractiveness; (3) some contents of employer information elicit negative emotions, whereas their complementary counterparts do not elicit positive affective reactions; and (4) expectations towards an employer and comparisons among employers influence potential applicants' sentiments about individual employers." (Author's abstract, IAB-Doku) ((en))

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  • Literaturhinweis

    Do high-wage jobs attract more applicants? Directed search evidence from the online labor market (2019)

    Banfi, Stefano; Villena-Roldán, Benjamín;

    Zitatform

    Banfi, Stefano & Benjamín Villena-Roldán (2019): Do high-wage jobs attract more applicants? Directed search evidence from the online labor market. In: Journal of labor economics, Jg. 37, H. 3, S. 715-746. DOI:10.1086/702627

    Abstract

    "Labor markets become more efficient in theory if job seekers direct their search. Using online job board data, we show that high-wage ads attract more applicants as in directed search models. Due to distinctive data features, we also estimate significant but milder directed search for hidden (or implicit) wages, suggesting that ad texts and requirements tacitly convey wage information. Since explicit-wage ads often target unskilled workers, other estimates in the literature ignoring hidden-wage ads may suffer from selection bias. Moreover, job ad requirements are aligned with their applicants' traits, as predicted in directed search models with heterogeneity." (Author's abstract, IAB-Doku) ((en))

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  • Literaturhinweis

    Structural empirical evaluation of job search monitoring (2019)

    Berg, Gerard J. van den; Klaauw, Bas van der;

    Zitatform

    Berg, Gerard J. van den & Bas van der Klaauw (2019): Structural empirical evaluation of job search monitoring. In: International Economic Review, Jg. 60, H. 2, S. 879-903. DOI:10.1111/iere.12376

    Abstract

    "To evaluate search effort monitoring of unemployed workers, it is important to take account of post-unemployment wages and job-to-job mobility. We structurally estimate a model with search channels, using an RCT in which monitoring is randomized. The data include registers and survey data on search behavior. We find that the opportunity to move to better-paid jobs in employment reduces the extent to which monitoring induces substitution towards formal search channels in unemployment. Job mobility compensates for adverse long-run effects of monitoring on wages. We examine counterfactual policies against moral hazard, like reemployment bonuses and changes of the benefits path." (Author's abstract, Published by arrangement with John Wiley & Sons) ((en))

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    Local labor market size and qualification mismatch (2019)

    Berlingieri, Francesco ;

    Zitatform

    Berlingieri, Francesco (2019): Local labor market size and qualification mismatch. In: Journal of economic geography, Jg. 19, H. 6, S. 1261-1286. DOI:10.1093/jeg/lby045

    Abstract

    "This paper investigates the effect of the size of the local labor market on skill mismatch. Using survey data for Germany, I find that workers in large cities are both less likely to be overqualified for their job and to work in a different field than the one for which they trained. Different empirical strategies are employed to account for the potential sorting of talented workers into more urbanized areas. Results on individuals who have never moved away from the place in which they grew up and fixed effects estimates obtaining identification through regional migrants suggest that sorting does not fully explain the existing differences in qualification mismatch across areas. This provides evidence of the existence of agglomeration economies through better matches. However, lower qualification mismatch in larger cities is found to explain at best a small part of the urban wage premium." (Author's abstract, IAB-Doku) ((en))

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    Skill shortages and skill mismatch in Europe: a review of the literature (2019)

    Brunello, Giorgio ; Wruuck, Patricia;

    Zitatform

    Brunello, Giorgio & Patricia Wruuck (2019): Skill shortages and skill mismatch in Europe. A review of the literature. (IZA discussion paper 12346), Bonn, 34 S.

    Abstract

    "Labour markets are currently in a phase of cyclical recovery and undergoing structural transformation due to globalisation, demographic trends, advancing digital technologies and automation and changes in labour market institutions. Against this background, businesses increasingly report that the limited availability of skills poses an impediment to corporate investment. Genuine skill constraints can negatively affect labour productivity and hamper the ability to innovate and adopt technological developments. For individual Europeans, not having 'the right skills' limits employability prospects and access to quality jobs. For Europe at large, persistent skill gaps and mismatches come at economic and social costs. This paper reviews the recent economic literature on skill mismatch and skill shortages with a focus on Europe a focus on Europe." (Author's abstract, IAB-Doku) ((en))

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    Google mischt den Markt auf (2019)

    Dunnett, Nick;

    Zitatform

    Dunnett, Nick (2019): Google mischt den Markt auf. In: Personalwirtschaft, Jg. 46, H. 8, S. 42-44.

    Abstract

    "Seit Ende Mai ist Google for Jobs in Deutschland verfügbar und quasi über Nacht zum Marktführer bei der Stellensuche avanciert. Doch welche Auswirkungen hat der neue Dienst auf die Akquise?" (Autorenreferat, IAB-Doku)

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    The intensity of job search and search duration (2019)

    Faberman, R. Jason; Kudlyak, Marianna;

    Zitatform

    Faberman, R. Jason & Marianna Kudlyak (2019): The intensity of job search and search duration. In: American Economic Journal. Macroeconomics, Jg. 11, H. 3, S. 327-357. DOI:10.1257/mac.20170315

    Abstract

    "We use online job application data to study the relationship between search intensity and search duration. The data allow us to control for job seeker composition and the evolution of available job openings over the duration of search. We find that, within an individual search spell, search intensity declines continuously. We also find that longer-duration job seekers search more intensely throughout their search. They tend to be older, male, nonemployed, and live in areas with weaker labor markets. Our findings contradict standard assumptions of labor search models. We discuss how to reconcile the theory with our evidence." (Author's abstract, IAB-Doku) ((en))

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    Job search under asymmetric information: endogenous wage dispersion and unemployment stigma (2019)

    Feng, Shuaizhang; Zheng, Bingyong; Lefgren, Lars; Platt, Brennan C.;

    Zitatform

    Feng, Shuaizhang, Lars Lefgren, Brennan C. Platt & Bingyong Zheng (2019): Job search under asymmetric information: endogenous wage dispersion and unemployment stigma. In: Economic Theory, Jg. 67, H. 4, S. 817-851. DOI:10.1007/s00199-018-1099-7

    Abstract

    "We present a model of directed job search with asymmetric information regarding worker type. While job applicants know their productivity type, firms can only observe the duration of unemployment as well as a noisy signal of worker type. Firms can offer an unscreened wage or a wage that is conditioned on passing the screening and the duration of unemployment. This framework leads to three possible equilibria, which depend on model parameter values. We describe the circumstances under, which each equilibrium may result and the empirical implications of each equilibrium. Our model sheds light into wage scarring, unemployment duration, wage dispersion and firm-wage sorting, as well as the effects of unemployment insurance and minimum wages on search behavior and the distribution of wages." (Author's abstract, IAB-Doku) ((en))

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  • Literaturhinweis

    Establishment closures in Germany: The motherhood penalty at job search durations (2019)

    Frodermann, Corinna; Müller, Dana;

    Zitatform

    Frodermann, Corinna & Dana Müller (2019): Establishment closures in Germany: The motherhood penalty at job search durations. In: European Sociological Review, Jg. 35, H. 6, S. 845-859., 2019-05-13. DOI:10.1093/esr/jcz043

    Abstract

    "This study contributes to the research on motherhood penalties by investigating based on German longitudinal register data whether mothers take longer to search for a job than childless women. We develop a unique research design to test the theory of statistical discrimination as well as the theory of status-based discrimination. We use establishment closures as a starting point that creates equal conditions for all previously employed women. Following a subsequent coarsened exact matching approach, we investigate the job search length of almost 3,000 comparable full-time working childless women and mothers from almost 700 establishments by applying event history techniques. Even after extensive robustness checks that back up the main findings, we can show that mothers have lower transition rates to re-employment than childless women. When including additional information, such as higher age of the youngest child or shorter parental leave durations, both of which serve as indicators of higher labour market attachment, we find reduced differences and buffering effects on the motherhood penalty." (Author's abstract, IAB-Doku) ((en))

    Beteiligte aus dem IAB

    Frodermann, Corinna; Müller, Dana;
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    Labor supply, income distribution, and tax progressivity in a search model (2019)

    Fu, Zhiming; Wu, Liang; Zhuang, Ziguan;

    Zitatform

    Fu, Zhiming, Liang Wu & Ziguan Zhuang (2019): Labor supply, income distribution, and tax progressivity in a search model. In: The B.E. Journal of Macroeconomics, Jg. 19, H. 1, S. 1-18. DOI:10.1515/bejm-2017-0185

    Abstract

    "We develop a search model with risk-averse households to study the impact of tax progressivity on labor supply and income inequality across education groups. Labor supply responses are considered along both intensive and extensive margins. Our quantitative results are consistent with those of the existing empirical literature. First, we find that a decline in tax progressivity associated with the Tax Reform Act of 1986 has a significant impact on the aggregate labor supply with approximately 61 percent occurred along the extensive margin. Second, households differ in their labor and income responses to tax reform. A decline in tax progressivity changes the income composition of each household by affecting labor supplies and asset holdings. This leads to an increase in income inequality. Therefore, the tax share paid by the most educated group rises due to an increase in capital income after tax reforms are instituted." (Author's abstract, © De Gruyter) ((en))

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    Social comparisons in job search (2019)

    Fu, Jingcheng; Sefton, Martin; Upward, Richard ;

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    Fu, Jingcheng, Martin Sefton & Richard Upward (2019): Social comparisons in job search. In: Journal of Economic Behavior & Organization, Jg. 168, S. 338-361. DOI:10.1016/j.jebo.2019.10.013

    Abstract

    Using a laboratory experiment we examine how social comparisons affect behavior in a sequential search task. In a control treatment subjects search in isolation, while in two other treatments subjects get feedback on the search decisions and outcomes of a partner subject. The average level and rate of decline of reservation wages are similar across treatments. Nevertheless, subjects who are able to make social comparisons search differently from those who search in isolation. Within a search task we observe a reference wage effect: when a partner exits, the subject chooses a new reservation wage which is increasing in partner income. We also observe a social comparison effect between search tasks: subjects whose partners in a previous task searched for longer choose a higher reservation wage in the next task. Our findings imply that the provision of social information can change job-seekers search behavior. (Author's Abstract, IAB-Doku)

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    The Quality-Weighted Matching Function: Did the German Labour Market Reforms Trade off Efficiency against Job Quality? (2019)

    Gartner, Hermann ; Weber, Enzo ; Rothe, Thomas;

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    Gartner, Hermann, Thomas Rothe & Enzo Weber (2019): The Quality-Weighted Matching Function: Did the German Labour Market Reforms Trade off Efficiency against Job Quality? (IAB-Discussion Paper 24/2019), Nürnberg, 14 S.

    Abstract

    "Wir analysieren den Zielkonflikt zwischen Umfang und Qualität der Beschäftigung, indem wir eine erweiterte Matching-Funktion schätzen, worin die Zahl der neue Beschäftigungsverhältnisse (Matches) mit deren Qualität gewichtet wird. Diesen Ansatz verwenden wir, um die Auswirkungen der Hartz-Reformen der Jahre 2003 bis 2005 auf den Arbeitsmarkt zu bewerten. In der Tat bestätigt sich, dass ein Teil der zusätzlichen Beschäftigungsverhältnisse durch schlechtere Qualität erkauft war. Auch bei konstanter Qualität der neuen Matches wäre aber gut die Hälfte des positiven Effektes auf die Matchingeffizienz infolge der Hartz-Reformen verblieben." (Autorenreferat, IAB-Doku)

    Beteiligte aus dem IAB

    Gartner, Hermann ; Weber, Enzo ;
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  • Literaturhinweis

    Endogenous wage regime selection: A general equilibrium model (2019)

    Hauptmann, Andreas;

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    Hauptmann, Andreas (2019): Endogenous wage regime selection. A general equilibrium model. In: Economics Bulletin, Jg. 39, H. 4, S. 2650-2663., 2019-11-15.

    Abstract

    "Diese Arbeit analysiert die Rolle von Transaktionskosten im Kontext unvollständiger Tarifabdeckung und endogener Wahl des Lohnregimes. Es wird oft angenommen, dass Unternehmen gegen Gewerkschaften sind, weil sie die Gewinne verringern. In vielen Ländern liegt die Anerkennung der Gewerkschaften jedoch im Ermessen des Arbeitgebers, und gleichzeitig ist der Tarifvertrag eine der wichtigsten Formen der Lohnfindung. Im Gegensatz zur bisherigen Literatur gehe ich davon aus, dass das Verhandeln selbst nicht mehr kostenlos ist, sondern zusätzliche Ressourcen erfordert. Basierend auf einem einfachen theoretischen Modell zeigen die Ergebnisse, dass unterschiedliche Lohnsysteme, gewerkschaftlich und nicht gewerkschaftlich, im allgemeinen Gleichgewicht koexistieren, wenn die Kostenstrukturen zwischen den Lohnsystemen ausreichend unterschiedlich sind." (Autorenreferat, IAB-Doku)

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    Hauptmann, Andreas;
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  • Literaturhinweis

    Specific human capital and wait unemployment (2019)

    Herz, Benedikt;

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    Herz, Benedikt (2019): Specific human capital and wait unemployment. In: Journal of labor economics, Jg. 37, H. 2, S. 467-508. DOI:10.1086/700190

    Abstract

    "A displaced worker might rationally prefer to wait through a long spell of unemployment instead of seeking employment at a lower wage in a job he is not trained for. I evaluate this trade-off using micro-data on displaced workers. To achieve identification, I exploit that the more a worker invested in occupation-specific human capital, the more costly it is for him to switch occupations and the higher is therefore his incentive to wait. I find that between 9% and 17% of total unemployment in the United States can be attributed to wait unemployment." (Author's abstract, IAB-Doku) ((en))

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    The social stigma of unemployment: consequences of stigma consciousness on job search attitudes, behaviour and success (2019)

    Krug, Gerhard ; Drasch, Katrin ; Jungbauer-Gans, Monika;

    Zitatform

    Krug, Gerhard, Katrin Drasch & Monika Jungbauer-Gans (2019): The social stigma of unemployment. Consequences of stigma consciousness on job search attitudes, behaviour and success. In: Journal for labour market research, Jg. 53, H. 1, S. 1-27., 2019-07-03. DOI:10.1186/s12651-019-0261-4

    Abstract

    "Studies show that the unemployed face serious disadvantages in the labour market and that the social stigma of unemployment is one explanation. In this paper, we focus on the unemployed's expectations of being stigmatized (stigma consciousness) and the consequences of such negative expectations on job search attitudes and behaviour. Using data from the panel study 'Labour Market and Social Security' (PASS), we find that the unemployed with high stigma consciousness suffer from reduced well-being and health. Regarding job search, the stigmatized unemployed are more likely to expect that their chances of re-employment are low, but in contrast, they are more likely to place a high value on becoming re-employed. Instead of becoming discouraged and passive, we find that stigmatized unemployed individuals increase their job search effort compared to other unemployed individuals. However, despite their higher job search effort, the stigma-conscious unemployed do not have better re-employment chances." (Author's abstract, © Springer-Verlag) ((en))

    Beteiligte aus dem IAB

    Krug, Gerhard ;
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    The role of spatial and skill mismatches: explaining long-term unemployment in Paris (2019)

    L'Horty, Yannick ; Sari, Florent ;

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    L'Horty, Yannick & Florent Sari (2019): The role of spatial and skill mismatches. Explaining long-term unemployment in Paris. In: Regional Studies. Journal of the Regional Studies Association, Jg. 53, H. 2, S. 283-296. DOI:10.1080/00343404.2018.1462480

    Abstract

    "In the Paris region, one can observe simultaneously the coexistence of a large and dynamic job pool with long-lasting periods of unemployment. This paradox reveals the importance of skill and spatial mismatch mechanisms, which are often used to explain disparities in local labour market outcomes. This paper uses several spatial models to measure the effects of these two mechanisms on unemployment durations in the Paris region. The results show that both problems affect municipalities close to the centre of Paris, while unemployment situations in municipalities on the fringes of the region are mainly affected by a lack of local employment dynamism." (Author's abstract, IAB-Doku) ((en))

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    Housing market and labor market search (2019)

    Limnios, Christopher;

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    Limnios, Christopher (2019): Housing market and labor market search. In: The B.E. Journal of Macroeconomics, Jg. 19, H. 1, S. 1-23. DOI:10.1515/bejm-2018-0049

    Abstract

    "Current models fail to concurrently account for several important empirical regularities in the housing and labor markets. I augment the Diamond-Mortensen-Pissarides (DMP) search and matching model of the labor market with a housing market characterized by search and matching frictions, integrating both markets in a coherent macroeconomic model. The model provides a framework to explain how shocks and frictions which originate in the labor market spill over into the housing market and vise versa. The model accounts for procyclical, serially correlated real estate values, rental rates and expected real estate appreciation. Further, it accounts for increases in wages, housing costs and willingness to commute as a result of increases in geographic amenities. The model is also consistent with the empirical relationship between vacancy rates in the housing market and separation rates in the labor market. Simulations demonstrate that certain land-use policies can mitigate permanent shocks to labor productivity and the level of geographic amenities." (Author's abstract, © De Gruyter) ((en))

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    Migration and online job search: A gravity model approach (2019)

    Mamertino, Mariano; Sinclair, Tara M. ;

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    Mamertino, Mariano & Tara M. Sinclair (2019): Migration and online job search: A gravity model approach. In: Economics Letters, Jg. 181, H. August, S. 51-53. DOI:10.1016/j.econlet.2019.05.005

    Abstract

    "In this study we introduce a new potential data source on migration intentions in the form of online job seekers actively searching for a job in a country other than their current location. We characterize job seeker interest across national borders by measuring user behavior on a major job search website. We show the job search data are strongly positively related to available OECD migration data and also find that in a gravity model both the determinants and the relative importance of the determinants for job search are similar to those in the literature for realized migration." (Author's abstract, © 2019 Elsevier) ((en))

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    Selective hiring and welfare analysis in labor market models (2019)

    Merkl, Christian ; Rens, Thijs van;

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    Merkl, Christian & Thijs van Rens (2019): Selective hiring and welfare analysis in labor market models. In: Labour economics, Jg. 57, H. April, S. 117-130. DOI:10.1016/j.labeco.2019.01.008

    Abstract

    "Firms select not only how many, but also which workers to hire. Yet, in most labor market models all workers have the same probability of being hired. We argue that selective hiring crucially affects welfare analysis. We set up a model that is isomorphic to a search model under random hiring but allows for selective hiring. With selective hiring, the positive predictions of the model change very little, but implications for welfare are different for two reasons. First, a hiring externality occurs with random but not with selective hiring. Second, the welfare costs of unemployment are much larger with selective hiring, because unemployment risk is distributed unequally across workers." (Author's abstract, © 2019 Elsevier) ((en))

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    Location-specific knowledge in spatial job search and its outcomes: An empirical investigation (2019)

    Morkuté, Gintaré;

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    Morkuté, Gintaré (2019): Location-specific knowledge in spatial job search and its outcomes. An empirical investigation. In: Papers in regional science, Jg. 98, H. 3, S. 1373-1395. DOI:10.1111/pirs.12418

    Abstract

    "This paper investigates how working location influences jobseekers' subsequent spatial job search. Further, it is assessed to what extent mobility between working regions is associated with wage growth. The results show that the working region functions as a prominent geographical anchor around which the new job search is focused. The jobseekers that do find a job far away from their old working region receive a small wage premium, but this premium disappears if selectivity is taken into account. It is concluded that employees demonstrate substantial stickiness to their working locations, and that this is motivated by asymmetry in search costs. No evidence was found that mobility between working regions in itself affects wages." (Author's abstract, Published by arrangement with John Wiley & Sons) ((en))

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    Building sectoral job search indices for the United States (2019)

    Pan, Wei-fong;

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    Pan, Wei-fong (2019): Building sectoral job search indices for the United States. In: Economics Letters, Jg. 180, H. July, S. 89-93. DOI:10.1016/j.econlet.2019.04.019

    Abstract

    "This study investigates job search activity in the United States by constructing a set of sectoral job search activity indices based on Internet search volumes. The indices are positively associated with countercyclical labour market measures, including unemployment and layoff rates, but are negatively associated with procyclical measures. Overall, our evidence supports previous empirical findings - job search intensity is countercyclical - which contradicts the theoretical model's prediction." (Author's abstract, © 2019 Elsevier) ((en))

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    The skill divide in post-unemployment job quality (2019)

    Rose, Damaris; Stier, Haya ;

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    Rose, Damaris & Haya Stier (2019): The skill divide in post-unemployment job quality. In: Social science research, Jg. 82, H. August, S. 105-112. DOI:10.1016/j.ssresearch.2019.04.003

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    Unemployment duration and the personalities of young adults workers (2019)

    Sansale, Rebecca; DeLoach, Stephen B. ; Kurt, Mark;

    Zitatform

    Sansale, Rebecca, Stephen B. DeLoach & Mark Kurt (2019): Unemployment duration and the personalities of young adults workers. In: Journal of Behavioral and Experimental Economics, Jg. 79, H. April, S. 1-11. DOI:10.1016/j.socec.2019.01.002

    Abstract

    "As in many countries, young adult workers in the United States have experienced tremendous employment volatility in recent years. In this paper, we examine the role personality plays in determining the duration of unemployment among young adults in the United States between 2008 and 2015. Evidence from estimation of a Competing Risks Model shows that when faced with unemployment, conscientious individuals are significantly more likely to find employment. Individuals scoring higher in neuroticism are more likely to leave the workforce and less likely to go back to school, while more agreeable individuals are more likely to go back to school. Because personality remains malleable for young adults, these results have implications for the literature related to job-search behavior as well as for educational and job-training programs." (Author's abstract, © 2019 Elsevier) ((en))

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    Horizontal mismatch between employment and field of education: evidence from a systematic literature review (2019)

    Somers, Melline A. ; Cabus, Sofie J.; Groot, Wim ; Maassen van den Brink, Henriëtte;

    Zitatform

    Somers, Melline A., Sofie J. Cabus, Wim Groot & Henriëtte Maassen van den Brink (2019): Horizontal mismatch between employment and field of education. Evidence from a systematic literature review. In: Journal of Economic Surveys, Jg. 33, H. 2, S. 597-603. DOI:10.1111/joes.12271

    Abstract

    "This paper provides a systematic review of the growing literature on the poor match between employees' field degree and the job requirements, also referred to as horizontal mismatch. We identify the different definitions used in the literature and find that each measure of horizontal mismatch yields substantially different incidence rates. We discuss the validity of the different measures and conclude that a more uniform definition of horizontal mismatch is needed. The likelihood of horizontal mismatch is among other things determined by the extent to which employees possess general skills as opposed to occupation-specific skills, and, it appears to be more frequently present among older workers. Compared to well-matched employees, horizontally mismatched workers generally incur a wage penalty, are less satisfied with their jobs, and are more likely to regret their study programme. The ensuing findings offer guidance to prevent horizontal mismatch as well as a roadmap for future research." (Author's abstract, Published by arrangement with John Wiley & Sons) ((en))

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    Zumutbarkeit von Erwerbstätigkeit und Verschlossenheit des Arbeitsmarktes - aus juristischer Sicht (2019)

    Stotz, Christian;

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    Stotz, Christian (2019): Zumutbarkeit von Erwerbstätigkeit und Verschlossenheit des Arbeitsmarktes - aus juristischer Sicht. In: Der medizinische Sachverständige : MedSach, Jg. 104, H. 3, S. 116-122.

    Abstract

    "In zwei Entscheidungen aus den Jahren 1967 und 1976 entwickelte der Große Senat des Bundessozialgerichts Fallgestaltungen, nach denen eine Rente wegen voller Erwerbsminderung von den Trägern der gesetzlichen Rentenversicherung gezahlt werden muss, obwohl der Versicherte noch drei Stunden oder mehr täglich arbeiten kann, weil der (Teilzeit-)Arbeitsmarkt insoweit als verschlossen angesehen werden müsse. Der seinerzeit lediglich als Nischenmarkt existierende Teilzeitarbeitsmarkt (84.000 Beschäftigte 1967) hat sich jedoch mittlerweile zu einem Massenmarkt (8,94 Millionen Beschäftigte 2017) entwickelt, so dass es naheliegend erscheint, diese Entscheidungen des Bundessozialgerichts zu hinterfragen. Die allgemeine Akzeptanz, die diese Rechtsprechung gefunden und die zu Rechtssicherheit und Rechtsfrieden in diesem Bereich geführt hat und die vom Gesetzgeber inzwischen in mehreren Normen kodifiziert worden ist, spricht allerdings dafür, zurückhaltend bei einer Forderung nach Überprüfung der Rechtsprechung zur Verschlossenheit des Arbeitsmarktes zu sein. Teilweise erwerbsgeminderte Personen unterfallen auch bei Bezug einer vollen Erwerbsminderungsrente wegen Verschlossenheit des Arbeitsmarktes dem SGB II. Über die Zumutbarkeitsvorschrift des § 10 SGB II ist ein ausreichender Schutz der teilweise erwerbsgeminderten Personen davor gewährleistet, Tätigkeiten aufnehmen oder an Eingliederungsmaßnahmen teilnehmen zu müssen, die ihrer physischen oder psychischen Leistungsfähigkeit nicht entsprechen." (Autorenreferat, IAB-Doku)

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