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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

    Urbanization, commuting and regional labor markets (2018)

    Haller, Peter;

    Zitatform

    Haller, Peter (2018): Urbanization, commuting and regional labor markets. (IAB-Bibliothek 368), Bielefeld: Bertelsmann, 124 S. DOI:10.3278/300972w

    Abstract

    "Deutschland ist durch seine regionale Struktur - mit vielen Zentren intensiver wirtschaftlicher Aktivität - besonders interessant für Analysen zu räumlichen Mechanismen von Städten und zu Wechselwirkungen zwischen Regionen. Mit steigender Bevölkerungszahl in den Städten dient das Pendeln zwischen Wohn- und Arbeitsort als räumlicher Ausgleichsmechanismus und führt zu Interaktionen zwischen regionalen Arbeitsmärkten. Der Autor untersucht, wie lokale Arbeitsmärkte interagieren, wie stark besiedelte Märkte bei der Suche nach einem neuen Arbeitsplatz helfen und wie Beschäftigte auf Änderungen ihrer Pendlerdistanzen reagieren. Die verschiedenen Blickwinkel und die Verwendung von Mikro- und georeferenzierten Daten bieten neue empirische Erkenntnisse über die Interaktionen zwischen regionalen Arbeitsmärkten und das Mobilitätsverhalten in Deutschland." (Autorenreferat, IAB-Doku)

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  • Literaturhinweis

    Big Data bei der BA: Neue Erkenntnisse zum Suchverhalten am Arbeitsmarkt (2018)

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

    Zitatform

    Hartl, Tobias, Christian Hutter & Enzo Weber (2018): Big Data bei der BA: Neue Erkenntnisse zum Suchverhalten am Arbeitsmarkt. In: IAB-Forum H. 29.05.2018, o. Sz., 2018-05-24.

    Abstract

    "Mit der Jobbörse der Bundesagentur für Arbeit (BA) und der Vermittler-Software 'VerBIS' erschließen sich für die Forschung ganz neuartige Datenquellen. Sie erlauben die Messung von Such- und Vermittlungsintensitäten und ermöglichen innovative Analysen des Arbeitsmarktgeschehens." (Autorenreferat, IAB-Doku)

    Beteiligte aus dem IAB

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

    Discretion in hiring (2018)

    Hoffman, Mitchell; Kahn, Lisa B. ; Li, Danielle;

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    Hoffman, Mitchell, Lisa B. Kahn & Danielle Li (2018): Discretion in hiring. In: The Quarterly Journal of Economics, Jg. 133, H. 2, S. 765-800. DOI:10.1093/qje/qjx042

    Abstract

    "Job-testing technologies enable firms to rely less on human judgment when making hiring decisions. Placing more weight on test scores may improve hiring decisions by reducing the influence of human bias or mistakes but may also lead firms to forgo the potentially valuable private information of their managers. We study the introduction of job testing across 15 firms employing low-skilled service sector workers. When faced with similar applicant pools, we find that managers who appear to hire against test recommendations end up with worse average hires. This suggests that managers often overrule test recommendations because they are biased or mistaken, not only because they have superior private information." (Author's abstract, IAB-Doku) ((en))

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  • Literaturhinweis

    Of carrots and sticks: The effect of workfare announcements on the job search behaviour and reservation wage of welfare recipients (2018)

    Hohmeyer, Katrin; Wolff, Joachim;

    Zitatform

    Hohmeyer, Katrin & Joachim Wolff (2018): Of carrots and sticks: The effect of workfare announcements on the job search behaviour and reservation wage of welfare recipients. In: Journal for labour market research, Jg. 52, H. 1, S. 1-23., 2018-09-23. DOI:10.1186/s12651-018-0245-9

    Abstract

    "The German workfare scheme 'One-Euro-Jobs', which provides additional jobs of public interest for welfare recipients, has a number of different goals. On the one hand, One-Euro-Jobs are intended to increase the participants' employment prospects in the medium term. On the other hand, they can be used to test welfare recipients' willingness to work. We use survey data from the Panel Study 'Labour Market and Social Security' and propensity score matching methods to study the intention-to-treat effect of receiving a One-Euro-Job announcement on job search behaviour, reservation wage and labour market performance of welfare recipients. We find that receiving a One-Euro-Job announcement increases job search activities significantly and decreases the reservation wage for women and individuals who have been employed within the last 4 years, but does not affect the short-term employment probability." (Author's abstract, © Springer-Verlag) ((en))

    Beteiligte aus dem IAB

    Hohmeyer, Katrin; Wolff, Joachim;
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  • Literaturhinweis

    How demanding are activation requirements for jobseekers (2018)

    Immervoll, Herwig; Knotz, Carlo ;

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    Immervoll, Herwig & Carlo Knotz (2018): How demanding are activation requirements for jobseekers. (OECD social, employment and migration working papers 215), Paris, 53 S. DOI:10.1787/2bdfecca-en

    Abstract

    "This paper presents new information on activity-related eligibility criteria for unemployment and related benefits in OECD- and EU-countries in 2017, comparing the strictness of 'demanding' elements built into unemployment benefits across countries and over time. Eligibility criteria for unemployment benefits determine what claimants need to do to successfully claim benefits initially or to continue receiving them. Benefit systems feature specific rules that define the type of job offers that claimants need to accept, requirements for papering on the outcomes of independent job-search efforts, obligations to participate in active labour market programmes, as well as sanctions for failing to meet these requirements. Such rules aim to strengthen incentives to look for, prepare for, and accept employment. They may also be used as a targeting device to reduce demands on benefit systems, and on associated employment services. While this may serve to limit support to genuine jobseekers, strict requirements can also exclude some intended recipients from financial and re-employment support, e.g., by discouraging them from applying. This paper presents detailed information on policy rules in 2017, summarises them into an overall policy indicator of eligibility strictness, and gauges recent policy trends by documenting changes in the strictness measures. A novelty is the inclusion of lower-tier unemployment or social assistance benefits in the compilation of policy rules. Results document a large number of reforms enacted after the Great Recession and suggest a slight convergence of policy rules across countries even though overall measures of the strictness of activity-related eligibility criteria have remained broadly unchanged during the recent past. In countries with multiple layers of support for the unemployed, availability requirements tend to be more demanding for lower-tier assistance benefits, while sanction rules tend to be more stringent for first-tier programmes." (Author's abstract, IAB-Doku) ((en))

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  • Literaturhinweis

    Social networks and the labour market mismatch (2018)

    Kalfa, Eleni; Piracha, Matloob ;

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    Kalfa, Eleni & Matloob Piracha (2018): Social networks and the labour market mismatch. In: Journal of population economics, Jg. 31, H. 3, S. 877-914. DOI:10.1007/s00148-017-0677-5

    Abstract

    "This paper assesses the extent to which social contacts and ethnic concentration affect the education-occupation mismatch of natives and immigrants. Using Australian panel data and employing a dynamic random effects probit model, we show that social capital exacerbates the incidence of over-education, particularly for females. Furthermore, for the foreign born, ethnic concentration significantly increases the incidence of over-education. Using an Alternative Index, we also show that social participation, friends and support and ethnic concentration are the main contributors in generating a mismatch, while reciprocity and trust does not seem to have any effect on over-education for both, immigrants and natives. Finally, we show that social networks are more beneficial for the relatively better educated." (Author's abstract, © Springer-Verlag) ((en))

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  • Literaturhinweis

    Inhalt schlägt Form (2018)

    Kanning, Uwe Peter; Dressler, Nathalie;

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    Kanning, Uwe Peter & Nathalie Dressler (2018): Inhalt schlägt Form. In: Personalwirtschaft, Jg. 45, H. 5, S. 64-66.

    Abstract

    "Schon lange diskutieren Experten, wie eine Stellenanzeige aussehen muss, damit sich die passenden Bewerber angesprochen fühlen. Eine neue Studie zeigt, welchen Einfluss die Gestaltung der Stellenanzeige auf Schüler und Azubis hat." (Autorenreferat, IAB-Doku)

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  • Literaturhinweis

    Mismatch am Arbeitsmarkt: Indikatoren, Handlungsfelder und Matching-Strategien im Wirkungsbereich von Vermittlung und Beratung (2018)

    Kerler, Monira; Steiner, Karin;

    Zitatform

    Kerler, Monira & Karin Steiner (2018): Mismatch am Arbeitsmarkt: Indikatoren, Handlungsfelder und Matching-Strategien im Wirkungsbereich von Vermittlung und Beratung. (AMS report 133), Wien, 93 S.

    Abstract

    "In dieser Publikation wurde eine Einführung in das Thema 'Mismatch am Arbeitsmarkt' gegeben. Im Vordergrund standen hierbei die Perspektiven von VermittlerInnen und BeraterInnen im AMS-Kontext, aber auch die Perspektive der Arbeitsuchenden selbst. Ziel war es, einen aktuellen Überblick über das Phänomen des Mismatch, dessen Ursachen, damit verbundene Herausforderungen sowie Mismatch-Indikatoren zu geben, das Jobsuchverhalten zu betrachten und die Auswirkungen von Mismatch auf Arbeitsuchende aufzuzeigen. Ebenso wurden die Motive und Bedarfe seitens VermittlerInnen, Arbeitgebern und Arbeitsuchenden berücksichtigt. Dabei wurde einerseits Wert auf einen Bezug zum Forschungsstand gelegt, andererseits wurden der Fokus auf praxisnahe und handlungsorientierte Bezüge gerichtet und die Einflussmöglichkeiten seitens der Vermittlung und Beratung ins Zentrum gestellt. Die unterschiedlichen Aspekte von und Einflussfaktoren auf Matching-Prozesse wurden daher zum einen von der Seite der bisherigen Forschungsergebnisse (hier und da auch von der Seite der theoretischen Fundierung) betrachtet. Zum anderen wurden auf Basis von eigenen, qualitativ angelegten Erhebungen Analysen durchgeführt und die Ergebnisse detailliert dargestellt." (Textauszug, IAB-Doku)

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  • Literaturhinweis

    Vacancy durations and entry wages: evidence from linked vacancy-employer-employee data (2018)

    Kettemann, Andreas; Mueller, Andreas I.; Zweimüller, Josef;

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    Kettemann, Andreas, Andreas I. Mueller & Josef Zweimüller (2018): Vacancy durations and entry wages. Evidence from linked vacancy-employer-employee data. (IZA discussion paper 11852), Bonn, 71 S.

    Abstract

    "This paper explores the relationship between the duration of a vacancy and the starting wage of a new job, using unusually informative data comprising detailed information on vacancies, the establishments posting the vacancies and the workers eventually filling the vacancies. We find that vacancy durations are negatively correlated with the starting wage and that this negative association is particularly strong with the establishment component of the starting wage. We also confirm previous findings that growing establishments fill their vacancies faster. To understand the relationship between establishment growth, vacancy filling and entry wages, we calibrate a model with directed search and ex-ante heterogeneous workers and firms. We find a strong tension between matching the sharp increase in vacancy filling for growing firms and the response of vacancy filling to firm-level wages. We discuss the implications of this finding as well as potential resolutions." (Author's abstract, IAB-Doku) ((en))

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  • Literaturhinweis

    Theory and evidence on employer collusion in the franchise sector (2018)

    Krueger, Alan B.; Ashenfelter, Orley;

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    Krueger, Alan B. & Orley Ashenfelter (2018): Theory and evidence on employer collusion in the franchise sector. (NBER working paper 24831), Cambrige, Mass., 28 S. DOI:10.3386/w24831

    Abstract

    "In this paper we study the role of covenants in franchise contracts that restrict the recruitment and hiring of employees from other units within the same franchise chain in suppressing competition for workers. Based on an analysis of 2016 Franchise Disclosure Documents, we find that 'no-poaching of workers agreements' are included in a surprising 58 percent of major franchisors' contracts, including McDonald's, Burger King, Jiffy Lube and H&R Block. The implications of these no-poaching agreements for models of oligopsony are also discussed. No-poaching agreements are more common for franchises in low-wage and high-turnover industries." (Author's abstract, IAB-Doku) ((en))

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  • Literaturhinweis

    Recruitment Process Outsourcing and Recruiter and Hiring Firm Characteristics: a Two Study Investigation (2018)

    Landay, Karen; DeArmond, Sarah;

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    Landay, Karen & Sarah DeArmond (2018): Recruitment Process Outsourcing and Recruiter and Hiring Firm Characteristics. A Two Study Investigation. In: Journal of personnel psychology, Jg. 17, H. 4, S. 183-192. DOI:10.1027/1866-5888/a000206

    Abstract

    "Recruitment process outsourcing (RPO) is rapidly expanding across the globe. However, understanding of its effects on job applicants remains limited. Using signaling theory, we examined the effects of recruiter characteristics, hiring firm reputation, and RPO on organization attraction in two experimental studies. Results showed significant main effects of recruiter competence, recruiter personableness, and hiring firm reputation on organization attraction. We also found significant interactions between both recruiter characteristics and RPO. This indicates that, contrary to prior research, RPO is more accurately conceptualized as a boundary condition that indicates to applicants when recruiter characteristics are relevant signals." (Author's abstract, © 2018 Hogrefe Verlag) ((en))

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  • Literaturhinweis

    Who gets hired? The importance of finding an open slot (2018)

    Lazear, Edward P.; Shaw, Kathryn L.; Stanton, Christopher T.;

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    Lazear, Edward P., Kathryn L. Shaw & Christopher T. Stanton (2018): Who gets hired? The importance of finding an open slot. In: Journal of labor economics, Jg. 36, H. S1, S. S133-S181. DOI:10.1086/694908

    Abstract

    "Being hired into a job depends not only on one's own skill but also on that of other applicants. When another able applicant applies, a well-suited worker may be forced into unemployment or into accepting an inferior job. A model of this process defines over- and underqualification and provides predictions on its prevalence and on the wages of mismatched workers. It also implies that unemployment is concentrated among the least skilled workers, while vacancies are concentrated among high-skilled jobs. Four data sets are used to confirm the implications and establish that the hiring probability is low when competing applicants are able." (Author's abstract, IAB-Doku) ((en))

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  • Literaturhinweis

    Long-term effects of job-search assistance: experimental evidence using administrative tax data (2018)

    Manoli, Dayanand S.; Patel, Ankur; Michaelides, Marios;

    Zitatform

    Manoli, Dayanand S., Marios Michaelides & Ankur Patel (2018): Long-term effects of job-search assistance. Experimental evidence using administrative tax data. (NBER working paper 24422), Cambrige, Mass., 49 S. DOI:10.3386/w24422

    Abstract

    "This paper uses administrative tax data to examine the long-term effects of an experimental job-search assistance program operating in Nevada in 2009. The program required randomly-selected unemployed workers who had just started collecting unemployment insurance (UI) benefits to undergo an eligibility review and receive personalized job-counseling services. The program led to substantial short-term reductions in UI receipt, and to persistent, long-term increases in employment and earnings. The program also affected participants' family outcomes, including total income, tax filing, tax liability, and home ownership. These findings show that job-search assistance programs may produce substantial long-term effects for participants and their families." (Author's abstract, IAB-Doku) ((en))

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  • Literaturhinweis

    Mismatch unemployment and the geography of job search (2018)

    Marinescu, Ioana ; Rathelot, Roland ;

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    Marinescu, Ioana & Roland Rathelot (2018): Mismatch unemployment and the geography of job search. In: American Economic Journal. Macroeconomics, Jg. 10, H. 3, S. 42-70. DOI:10.1257/mac.20160312

    Abstract

    "Could we significantly reduce US unemployment by helping job seekers move closer to jobs? Using data from the leading employment board CareerBuilder.com, we show that, indeed, workers dislike applying to distant jobs: job seekers are 35 percent less likely to apply to a job 10 miles (mi.) away from their zip code of residence. However, because job seekers are close enough to vacancies on average, this distaste for distance is fairly inconsequential: our search and matching model predicts that relocating job seekers to minimize unemployment would decrease unemployment by only 5.3 percent. Geographic mismatch is thus a minor driver of aggregate unemployment." (Author's abstract, IAB-Doku) ((en))

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  • Literaturhinweis

    On the job search and business cycles (2018)

    Moscarini, Giuseppe; Postel-Vinay, Fabien;

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    Moscarini, Giuseppe & Fabien Postel-Vinay (2018): On the job search and business cycles. (IZA discussion paper 11853), Bonn, 54 S.

    Abstract

    "We propose a highly tractable way of analyzing business cycles in an environment with random job search both off- and and on-the-job (OJS). Ex post heterogeneity in productivity across jobs generates a job ladder. Firms Bertrand-compete for employed workers, as in the Sequential Auctions protocol of Postel-Vinay and Robin (2002). We identify three channels through which OJS amplifies and propagates aggregate shocks: (i) a higher estimated elasticity of the matching function, when recognizing that at least half of all hires are from other employers; (ii) the differential returns to hiring employed and unemployed job applicants, whose proportions naturally vary over the business cycle; (iii) within employment, the slow reallocation of workers through OJS across rungs of the job ladder, generating endogenous, slowly evolving opportunities for further poaching, which feed back on job creation incentives. Endogenous job destruction, due to either aggregate or idiosyncratic shocks, is countercyclical and thus raises the cyclical volatility of unemployment, closer to its empirical value; but it also stimulates job creation in recessions, to take advantage of the fresh batch of unemployed, and tilts the Beveridge curve up. OJS corrects this tendency and restores a vacancy-unemployment trade-off more in line with empirical observations." (Author's abstract, IAB-Doku) ((en))

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  • Literaturhinweis

    The mobility of displaced workers: How the local industry mix affects job search (2018)

    Neffke, Frank M. H.; Hidalgo, César; Otto, Anne ;

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    Neffke, Frank M. H., Anne Otto & César Hidalgo (2018): The mobility of displaced workers: How the local industry mix affects job search. In: Journal of urban economics, Jg. 108, H. November, S. 124-140., 2018-09-27. DOI:10.1016/j.jue.2018.09.006

    Abstract

    "Are there Marshallian externalities in job search? We study how workers who lose their jobs in establishment closures in Germany cope with their loss of employment. About a fifth of these displaced workers do not return to social-security covered employment within the next three years. Among those who do get re-employed, about two-thirds leave their old industry and one-third move out of their region. However, which of these two types of mobility responses workers will choose depends on the local industry mix in ways that are suggestive of Marshallian benefits to job search. In particular, large concentrations of one's old industry makes it easier to find new jobs: in regions where the pre-displacement industry is large, displaced workers suffer relatively small earnings losses and find new work faster. In contrast, large local industries skill-related to the pre-displacement industry increase earnings losses but also protect against long-term unemployment. Analyzed through the lens of a job-search model, the exact spatial and industrial job-switching patterns reveal that workers take these Marshallian externalities into account when deciding how to allocate search efforts among industries." (Author's abstract, © 2018 Elsevier) ((en))

    Beteiligte aus dem IAB

    Otto, Anne ;

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  • Literaturhinweis

    Education outcomes and the labor market (2018)

    Obiols-Homs, F. ; Sánchez-Marcos, V.;

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    Obiols-Homs, F. & V. Sánchez-Marcos (2018): Education outcomes and the labor market. In: Labour economics, Jg. 54, H. October, S. 14-28. DOI:10.1016/j.labeco.2018.06.001

    Abstract

    "The quality of education appears to be negatively correlated with both the overeducation of workers at the tasks they perform and the unemployment rate across EU-15 countries, and positively correlated with the wage premium associated to tertiary education. We develop a model of the labor market with frictions to quantitatively investigate the impact of the education outcomes on the labor market. We show that both the ability of educated and non educated workers have sizable effects on the incentives of firms regarding the type of vacancies they open and also regarding the incentives of educated workers as of where to search for a job. Therefore education outcomes are relevant to understand the overeducation phenomena observed in the labor market. According to our quantitative analysis had the quality of education observed in Spain been similar to the European average then the overeducation rate would have been between 5 and 10 percentage points lower and the unemployment rate of the two types of workers would be reduced by 40%, but the tertiary education wage premium would be slightly smaller than in the benchmark economy." (Author's abstract, © 2018 Elsevier) ((en))

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  • Literaturhinweis

    Essays on unemployment, job search behavior and policy interventions (2018)

    Pohlan, Laura ; Nolte, André; Blömer, Maximilian; Gürtzgen, Nicole ; Bergemann, Annette; Berg, Gerard J. van den; Stichnoth, Holger; Uhlendorff, Arne;

    Zitatform

    Pohlan, Laura, André Nolte, Maximilian Blömer, Nicole Gürtzgen, Annette Bergemann, Gerard J. van den Berg, Holger Stichnoth & Arne Uhlendorff (2018): Essays on unemployment, job search behavior and policy interventions. Mannheim, XIV, 235 S.

    Abstract

    "This dissertation explores through which channels unemployment leads to exclusion from society and how policy interventions and technological innovations affect individual job search behavior and are able to bring unemployed persons back into the labor market. All four chapters contained in this dissertation are based on large individual-level data sets from Germany and aim at identifying causal relationships by employing different empirical methods. This thesis starts in the first chapter with an analysis of how job loss impacts different dimensions of social exclusion and shows that unemployment has detrimental economic and social effects. In the second chapter, which is co-authored by Annette Bergemann and Arne Uhlendorff, we study employment effects of participation in job creation schemes in the years after German reunification. We find that participation in job creation programs is beneficial for high skilled women in times of economic instability. In the third chapter, my co-authors Maximilian Blömer, Nicole Gürtzgen, Holger Stichnoth, Gerard van den Berg and I estimate an equilibrium job search model and simulate the introduction of different minimum wage levels. The results indicate that minimum wage effects on unemployment are non-linear and highly dependent on the labor market structure. In the last chapter, which is co-authored by Nicole Gürtzgen, André Nolte and Gerard van den Berg, we find that high-speed internet leads to higher reemployment probabilities with a certain time delay. This effect is particularly pronounced for unemployed males." (Author's abstract, IAB-Doku) ((en))

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  • Literaturhinweis

    Internetgestützte Erfassung offener Stellen: Machbarkeitsstudie im Rahmen eines ESSnet-Projekts zu Big Data (2018)

    Rengers, Martina;

    Zitatform

    Rengers, Martina (2018): Internetgestützte Erfassung offener Stellen. Machbarkeitsstudie im Rahmen eines ESSnet-Projekts zu Big Data. In: Wirtschaft und Statistik H. 5, S. 11-33.

    Abstract

    "Können Stellenanzeigen aus dem Internet für die amtliche Statistik nutzbar gemacht werden? Um diese Frage drehte sich ein europäisches ESSnet-Big-Data-Projekt, an dem sich das Statistische Bundesamt seit 2016 beteiligte. Der wichtigste Aspekt bei einer Antwort auf diese Fragestellung ist die Beurteilung der Qualität dieser neuen digitalen Datenquelle. Für die Analyse verwendete das Statistische Bundesamt Daten des Jobportals der Bundesagentur für Arbeit und des Europäischen Zentrums für die Förderung der Berufsbildung. Diese wurden der Stellenerhebung des Instituts für Arbeitsmarkt- und Berufsforschung gegenübergestellt. Der Beitrag erläutert das Projekt und gibt die wesentlichen Arbeitsergebnisse für Deutschland wieder." (Autorenreferat, © Statistisches Bundesamt, Wiesbaden)

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  • Literaturhinweis

    How unemployment scarring affects skilled young workers: Evidence from a factorial survey of Swiss recruiters (2018)

    Shi, Lulu P. ; Sacchi, Stefan ; Imdorf, Christian ; Samuel, Robin ;

    Zitatform

    Shi, Lulu P., Christian Imdorf, Robin Samuel & Stefan Sacchi (2018): How unemployment scarring affects skilled young workers. Evidence from a factorial survey of Swiss recruiters. In: Journal for labour market research, Jg. 52, H. 1, S. 1-15. DOI:10.1186/s12651-018-0239-7

    Abstract

    "We ask how employers contribute to unemployment scarring in the recruitment process in the German-speaking part of Switzerland. By drawing on recruitment theories, we aim to better understand how recruiters assess different patterns of unemployment in a job candidate's CV and how this affects the chances of young applicants being considered for a vacancy. We argue that in contexts with tight school-work linkage and highly standardised Vocational Education and Training systems, the detrimental effect of early unemployment depends on how well the applicant's profile matches the requirements of the advertised position. To test this assumption, we surveyed Swiss recruiters who were seeking to fill positions during the time of data collection. We employed a factorial survey experiment that tested how the (un)employment trajectories in hypothetical young job applicants' CV affected their chances of being considered for a real vacancy. Our results show that unemployment decreases the perceived suitability of an applicant for a specific job, which implies there is a scarring effect of unemployment that increases with the duration of being unemployed. But we also found that these effects are moderated by how well the applicant's profile matches the job's requirements. Overall, the worse the match between applicant's profile and the job profile, the smaller are the scarring effects of unemployment. In sum, our findings contribute to the literature by revealing considerable heterogeneity in the scarring effects of unemployment. Our findings further suggest that the scarring effects of unemployment need to be studied with regard to country-specific institutional settings, the applicants' previous education and employment experiences, and the job characteristics." (Author's abstract, © Springer-Verlag) ((en))

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