Niedriglohnarbeitsmarkt
Der Ausbau des Niedriglohnsektors sollte Ende der 1990er Jahre die hohe Arbeitslosigkeit reduzieren. Als Niedriglohn gilt ein Arbeitsentgelt, das trotz Vollzeitbeschäftigung keine angemessene Existenzsicherung gewährleistet – die OECD definiert den ihn als einen Bruttolohn, der unterhalb von zwei Dritteln des nationalen Medianbruttolohns aller Vollzeitbeschäftigten liegt. Betroffen von Niedriglöhnen sind überdurchschnittlich häufig Personen ohne beruflichen Abschluss, jüngere Erwerbstätige und Frauen.
Bietet der Niedriglohnsektor eine Chance zum Einstieg in den Arbeitsmarkt oder ist er eine Sackgasse? Das IAB-Themendossier erschließt Informationen zum Forschungsstand.
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- Theorie
- Politik und Maßnahmen
- Arbeitsmarkt- und Lohnentwicklung
- Arbeitswelt, Personalpolitik
- Personengruppen
- Wirtschaftszweige
- Geschlecht
- geografischer Bezug
- Alter
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Literaturhinweis
Inequality and specialization: The growth of low-skill service jobs in the United States (2009)
Zitatform
Autor, David & David Dorn (2009): Inequality and specialization: The growth of low-skill service jobs in the United States. (IZA discussion paper 4290), Bonn, 57 S.
Abstract
"After a decade in which wages and employment fell precipitously in low-skill occupations and expanded in high-skill occupations, the shape of U.S. earnings and job growth sharply polarized in the 1990s. Employment shares and relative earnings rose in both low and highskill jobs, leading to a distinct U-shaped relationship between skill levels and employment and wage growth. This paper analyzes the sources of the changing shape of the lower-tail of the U.S. wage and employment distributions. A first contribution is to document a hitherto unknown fact: the twisting of the lower tail is substantially accounted for by a single proximate cause - rising employment and wages in low-education, in-person service occupations. We study the determinants of this rise at the level of local labor markets over the period of 1950 through 2005. Our approach is rooted in a model of changing task specialization in which 'routine' clerical and production tasks are displaced by automation. We find that in labor markets that were initially specialized in routine-intensive occupations, employment and wages polarized after 1980, with growing employment and earnings in both high-skill occupations and low-skill service jobs." (Author's abstract, IAB-Doku) ((en))
Ähnliche Treffer
auch erschienen als: NBER working paper , 15150 -
Literaturhinweis
Low-wage work in five European countries and the United States (2009)
Bosch, Gerhard;Zitatform
Bosch, Gerhard (2009): Low-wage work in five European countries and the United States. In: International Labour Review, Jg. 148, H. 4, S. 337-356.
Abstract
"Analysing research findings on Denmark, Germany, France, the Netherlands, the United Kingdom and the United States, the author shows that the incidence and conditions of low-paid employment in each country are determined by a set of institutions, including minimum wage and active labour market policies, tax and social security systems, and collective bargaining. The widely assumed trade-off between employment and wages, he argues, is not inescapable: active labour market policies for individual empowerment and institutions imposing 'beneficial constraints' can prevent improved conditions at the bottom of the earnings distribution from translating into higher unemployment, while also helping to narrow inequalities." (Author's abstract, IAB-Doku) ((en))
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Literaturhinweis
Minimum wages in January 2009 (2009)
Czech, Beate;Zitatform
Czech, Beate (2009): Minimum wages in January 2009. (Statistics in focus 2009/29), Luxemburg, 8 S.
Abstract
"In 20 (Belgien, Bulgarien, Spanien, Estland, Griechenland, Frankreich, Ungarn, Irland, Lettland, Litauen, Luxemburg, Malta, den Niederlanden, Polen, Portugal, Rumänien, der Slowakei, Slowenien, der Tschechischen Republik und dem Vereinigten Königreich) der 27 EU-Mitgliedsstaaten, sowie im Kandidatenland Türkei und in den Vereinigten Staaten existieren gesetzliche Mindestlöhne. Bezogen auf die absolute Höhe des nationalen Mindestlohns verzeichnete man beträchtliche Unterschiede zwischen den Mitgliedstaaten: Die Spanne reicht von monatlich 123 Euro in Bulgarien bis hin zu monatlich 1 642 Euro in Luxemburg, was einem Verhältnis (in Euro) von eins zu dreizehn entspricht. Nachdem die Auswirkungen von Preisniveauunterschieden durch die Anwendung von Kaufkraftparitäten (KKP) für die Konsumausgaben der privaten Haushalte herausgerechnet wurden, verringern sich die Unterschiede deutlich auf ein Verhältnis von eins zu sechs (in KKP) mit Werten von 240 für Bulgarien und 1 413 für Luxemburg." (Autorenreferat, IAB-Doku)
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Literaturhinweis
Stepping stone or dead end? The effect of the EITC on earnings growth (2009)
Dahl, Molly; Schwabish, Jonathan; DeLeire, Thomas;Zitatform
Dahl, Molly, Thomas DeLeire & Jonathan Schwabish (2009): Stepping stone or dead end? The effect of the EITC on earnings growth. (IZA discussion paper 4146), Bonn, 33 S.
Abstract
"While many studies have found that the EITC increases the employment rates of single mothers, no study to date has examined whether the jobs taken by single mothers as a result of the EITC incentives are 'dead-end' jobs or jobs that have the potential for earnings growth. Using a panel of administrative earnings data linked to nationally representative survey data, we find no evidence that the EITC expansions between 1994 and 1996 induced single mothers to take 'dead-end' jobs. If anything, the increase in earnings growth during the mid-to-late 1990s for single mothers who were particularly affected by the EITC expansion was higher than it was for other similar women. The EITC encourages work among single mothers, and that work continues to pay off through future increases in earnings." (Author's abstract, IAB-Doku) ((en))
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Literaturhinweis
Stepping off the wage escalator: the effects of wage growth on equilibrium employment (2009)
Zitatform
Elsby, Michael W. L. & Matthew D. Shapiro (2009): Stepping off the wage escalator. The effects of wage growth on equilibrium employment. (NBER working paper 15117), Cambridge, Mass., 58 S. DOI:10.3386/w15117
Abstract
"This paper emphasizes the role of wage growth in shaping work incentives. It provides an analytical framework for labor supply in the presence of a return to labor market experience and aggregate productivity growth. A key finding of the theory is that there is an interaction between these two forms of wage growth that explains why aggregate productivity growth can affect employment rates in steady state. The model thus speaks to an enduring puzzle in macroeconomics by uncovering a channel from the declines in trend aggregate wage growth that accompanied the productivity slowdown of the 1970s to persistent declines in employment. The paper also shows that the return to experience for high school dropouts has fallen substantially since the 1970s, which further contributes to the secular decline in employment rates. Taken together, the mechanisms identified in the paper can account for all of the increase in nonemployment among white male high school dropouts from 1968 to 2006. For all white males, it accounts for approximately one half of the increase in the aggregate nonemployment rate over the same period." (Author's abstract, IAB-Doku) ((en))
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Literaturhinweis
High-touch and here-to-stay: Future skills demands in US low wage service occupations (2009)
Gatta, Mary; Boushey, Heather; Appelbaum, Eileen;Zitatform
Gatta, Mary, Heather Boushey & Eileen Appelbaum (2009): High-touch and here-to-stay: Future skills demands in US low wage service occupations. In: Sociology, Jg. 43, H. 5, S. 968-989. DOI:10.1177/0038038509340735
Abstract
"Interactive service occupations, requiring face-to-face contact, are rapidly growing in the US as they are typically not susceptible to larger trends of off-shoring and computerization. Yet conventional paradigms of understanding the nature of that work, and in particular the skill demands, are often ill equipped to deal with the 'interactive' aspects of these gendered and racialized occupations. As a result, discussions of lower-end service occupations have typically grouped together a variety of jobs that require little or no higher education, without examining the actual skill content and job requirements of these occupations. In this article we delve more deeply into the rapidly growing non-professional service occupations in the US and the level of skills these jobs require, with the intention of creating a framework that will reorient future sociological research in this area." (Author's abstract, IAB-Doku) ((en))
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Literaturhinweis
Emerging contexts of second-generation labour markets in the United States (2009)
Goodwin-White, Jamie;Zitatform
Goodwin-White, Jamie (2009): Emerging contexts of second-generation labour markets in the United States. In: Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies, Jg. 35, H. 7, S. 1105-1128. DOI:10.1080/13691830903006135
Abstract
"In this paper I examine how local labour market contexts matter for the Hispanic adult children of immigrants in the United States. Specifically, I consider how these workers fit into ethnic divisions of labour in five metropolitan areas: the traditional immigrant cities of Los Angeles, New York and Chicago, and the newer immigrant gateways of Atlanta and Phoenix. I focus on the changing economies of these cities in the 1990s, and how industrial changes affect the jobs and relative wages available to immigrants and their adult children. I also examine the extent to which the adult children of immigrants are occupationally clustered in 'immigrant jobs'. Intergenerational occupational shifts vary by metropolitan area, but are heavily gendered across all of them. I also discuss the interactions of other scales of context, since state and national-level legislation, local organising efforts and internal migration all shape the settings within which the children of immigrants come of age." (Author's abstract, IAB-Doku) ((en))
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Literaturhinweis
Lessons from the policy world: How the economy, work supports, and education matter for low-income workers (2009)
Zitatform
Lambert, Susan J. (2009): Lessons from the policy world: How the economy, work supports, and education matter for low-income workers. In: Work and occupations, Jg. 36, H. 1, S. 56-65. DOI:10.1177/0730888408329637
Abstract
"Work and employment scholars interested in jobs and workers at the lower end of the labor market have much to learn from a recent set of volumes authored by policy scholars. These volumes focus on how shifts in the macroeconomy, work supports, and postsecondary education affect the well-being of workers both on and off the job. This essay identifies some of the more subtle contributions of these volumes to knowledge on the nature of employment. It explains how many of the analyses could benefit, however, from additional consideration of the jobs low-earners perform. The essay concludes by offering specific suggestions for incorporating additional measures of job conditions into policy-relevant research." (Author's abstract, IAB-Doku) ((en))
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Literaturhinweis
Does self-employment increase the economic well-being of low-skilled workers? (2009)
Lofstrom, Magnus;Zitatform
Lofstrom, Magnus (2009): Does self-employment increase the economic well-being of low-skilled workers? (IZA discussion paper 4539), Bonn, 46 S.
Abstract
"Low-skilled workers do not fare well in today's skill intensive economy and their opportunities continue to diminish. Given that individuals in this challenging skill segment of the workforce are more likely to have poor experiences in the labor market, and hence incur greater public expenses, it is particularly important to seek and evaluate their labor market options. Utilizing data from the Survey of Income and Program Participation, this paper provides a comprehensive analysis of the economic returns to business ownership among low-skilled workers and addresses the essential question of whether self-employment is a good option for low-skilled individuals that policymakers might consider encouraging. The analysis reveal substantial differences in the role of self-employment among low-skilled workers across gender and nativity - women and immigrants are shown to be of particular importance both from the perspectives of trends and policy relevance. We find that although the returns to low-skilled self-employment among men are relatively high we find that wage/salary employment is a substantially more financially rewarding option for most women. These findings raise the question of why low-skilled women enter self-employment. Our business start-up results are consistent, but not conclusive, with lack of affordable child care options and limited labor market opportunities in the wage/salary sector as motivating native born women to enter self-employment. We do not find empirical evidence of similar constraints among immigrant women." (Author's abstract, IAB-Doku) ((en))
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Literaturhinweis
RSA - peut-on apprendre des expériences étrangères?: un bilan des travaux sur l'EITC e le WFTC (2009)
Mikol, Fanny; Remy, Veronique;Zitatform
Mikol, Fanny & Veronique Remy (2009): RSA - peut-on apprendre des expériences étrangères? Un bilan des travaux sur l'EITC e le WFTC. In: Travail et emploi H. 120, S. 63-75.
Abstract
"Earned income tax credit have been implemented in the United States and the United Kingdom since decades with two main objectives: income redistribution and giving incentives to get back to work. The Earned Income Tax Credit in the US and the Working Family Tax Credit in the UK have been largely studied: they both had effects on recipients' labour market participation differing according to their family situation. Although these credits aim at increasing household income, they may exert downward pressure on wages of both entitled and not entitled workers. These studies' results can be useful to anticipate the consequences of the 'tax credit' part of the RSA on labour market participation and on wages. Received by low-income workers, this new tax credit is closer to American and British ones than Employment Allowance ('prime pour l'emploi ')." (Author's abstract, IAB-Doku) ((en))
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Literaturhinweis
Discrimination in a low-wage labor market: a field experiment (2009)
Zitatform
Pager, Devah, Bruce Western & Bart Bonikowski (2009): Discrimination in a low-wage labor market. A field experiment. In: American Sociological Review, Jg. 74, H. 5, S. 777-799.
Abstract
"Decades of racial progress have led some researchers and policymakers to doubt that discrimination remains an important cause of economic inequality. To study contemporary discrimination, we conducted a field experiment in the low-wage labor market of New York City, recruiting white, black, and Latino job applicants who were matched on demographic characteristics and interpersonal skills. These applicants were given equivalent résumés and sent to apply in tandem for hundreds of entry-level jobs. Our results show that black applicants were half as likely as equally qualified whites to receive a callback or job offer. In fact, black and Latino applicants with clean backgrounds fared no better than white applicants just released from prison. Additional qualitative evidence from our applicants' experiences further illustrates the multiple points at which employment trajectories can be deflected by various forms of racial bias. These results point to the subtle yet systematic forms of discrimination that continue to shape employment opportunities for low-wage workers." (Author's abstract, IAB-Doku) ((en))
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Literaturhinweis
Discrimination in a low-wage labor market: a field experiment (2009)
Zitatform
Pager, Devah, Bruce Western & Bart Bonikowski (2009): Discrimination in a low-wage labor market. A field experiment. (IZA discussion paper 4469), Bonn, 49 S.
Abstract
"Decades of racial progress have led some researchers and policymakers to doubt that discrimination remains an important cause of economic inequality. To study contemporary discrimination we conducted a field experiment in the low-wage labor market of New York City. The experiment recruited white, black, and Latino job applicants, called testers, who were matched on demographic characteristics and interpersonal skills. The testers were given equivalent resumes and sent to apply in tandem for hundreds of entry-level jobs. Our results show that black applicants were half as likely to receive a call-back or job offer relative to equally qualified whites. In fact, black and Latino applicants with clean backgrounds fared no better than a white applicant just released from prison. Additional qualitative evidence from our testers' experiences further illustrates the multiple points at which employment trajectories can be deflected by various forms of racial bias. Together these results point to the subtle but systematic forms of discrimination that continue to shape employment opportunities for low-wage workers." (Author's abstract, IAB-Doku) ((en))
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Literaturhinweis
Identifying minimum wage effects: new evidence from monthly CPS data (2009)
Zitatform
Sabia, Joseph J. (2009): Identifying minimum wage effects. New evidence from monthly CPS data. In: Industrial relations, Jg. 48, H. 2, S. 311-328. DOI:10.1111/j.1468-232X.2009.00559.x
Abstract
"The appropriateness of including year effects in employment models has been a contentious issue in the minimum wage literature. Using monthly data from the 1979-2004 Current Population Surveys, I find consistent evidence of adverse labor demand effects for teenagers across specifications preferred by those on each side of this debate. Estimated employment elasticities range from -0.2 to -0.3 and unconditional hours elasticities from -0.4 to -0.5." (Author's abstract, IAB-Doku) ((en))
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Literaturhinweis
The effects of minimum wage increases on retail employment and hours: new evidence from monthly CPS data (2009)
Zitatform
Sabia, Joseph J. (2009): The effects of minimum wage increases on retail employment and hours. New evidence from monthly CPS data. In: Journal of labor research, Jg. 30, H. 1, S. 75-97. DOI:10.1007/s12122-008-9054-1
Abstract
"Proponents of state and federal minimum wage increases argue that past minimum wage hikes have not adversely affected retail employment. However, the existing empirical evidence is mixed. This study uses monthly data from the 1979-2004 Current Population Survey to provide new estimates of the effect of minimum wage increases on retail employment and hours worked. The findings suggest evidence of modest adverse effects. A 10% increase in the minimum wage is associated with a 1% decline in retail trade employment and usual weekly hours worked. Larger negative employment and hours effects are observed for the least experienced workers in the retail sector. These results are robust across a number of specifications, but are sensitive to controls for state time trends." (Author's abstract, IAB-Doku) ((en))
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Literaturhinweis
Using local labor market data to re-examine the employment effects of the minimum wage (2009)
Thompson, Jeffrey P.;Zitatform
Thompson, Jeffrey P. (2009): Using local labor market data to re-examine the employment effects of the minimum wage. In: Industrial and Labor Relations Review, Jg. 62, H. 3, S. 343-366.
Abstract
"Using quarterly Census data for 1996-2000, the author evaluates how minimum wages affected teenage employment at the county level. An analysis that includes all counties yields small and statistically insignificant effects, consistent with previous research using state panels. However, in counties where the minimum wage was likely binding (above the market-clearing wage for teens), the negative impact on employment was considerably larger. The effect was strongest in small counties, was restricted to 'transitory' jobs and new hires, and apparently was not experienced by young adults ages 19-22. The small employment effects found in much of the literature, the author argues, at least partly reflect the estimates' inclusion of local labor markets where the minimum wage is not binding. By averaging the effects across all areas, with no disaggregation based on where the minimum wage is binding and where it is not, these studies overlook important regional variation." (Author's abstract, IAB-Doku) ((en))
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Literaturhinweis
Rethinking the regulation of vulnerable work in the USA: a sector-based approach (2009)
Zitatform
Weil, David (2009): Rethinking the regulation of vulnerable work in the USA. A sector-based approach. In: Journal of Industrial Relations, Jg. 51, H. 3, S. 411-430. DOI:10.1177/0022185609104842
Abstract
"This article discusses one of the major challenges of US workplace policy: protecting roughly 35m workers who are vulnerable to a variety of major risks in the workplace. After laying out the dimensions of this problem, I show that the vulnerable workforce is concentrated in a subset of sectors with distinctive industry characteristics. Examining how employer organizations relate to one another in these sectors provides insight into some of the causes as well as possible solutions for redressing workforce vulnerability in the US as well as other countries facing similar problems." (Author's abstract, IAB-Doku) ((en))
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Literaturhinweis
The effect of minimum wages on wages and employment: county-level estimates for the United States (2008)
Zitatform
Addison, John T., McKinley L. Blackburn & Chad D. Cotti (2008): The effect of minimum wages on wages and employment. County-level estimates for the United States. (IZA discussion paper 3300), Bonn, 50 S.
Abstract
"We use county-level data on employment and earnings in the restaurant-and-bar sector to evaluate the impact of minimum wage changes on low-wage labor markets. Our empirical approach is similar to the literature that has used state-level panel data to estimate minimum-wage impacts, with the difference that we focus on a particular sector rather than demographic group. Our estimated models are consistent with a simple competitive model of the restaurant-and-bar labor market in which supply-and-demand factors affect both the equilibrium outcome and the probability that a minimum wage will be binding in any given time period. Our evidence does not suggest that minimum wages reduce employment in the overall restaurant-and-bar sector, after controls for trends in sector employment at the county level are incorporated in the model. Employment in this sector appears to exhibit a downward long-term trend in states that have increased their minimum wages relative to states that have not, thereby predisposing fixed-effects estimates towards finding negative employment effects." (Author's abstract, IAB-Doku) ((en))
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Literaturhinweis
Can policy interact with culture? Minimum wage and the quality of labor relations (2008)
Zitatform
Aghion, Philippe, Yann Algan & Pierre Cahuc (2008): Can policy interact with culture? Minimum wage and the quality of labor relations. (IZA discussion paper 3680), Bonn, 69 S.
Abstract
"Can public policy interfere with culture, such as beliefs and norms of cooperation? We investigate his question by evaluating the interactions between the State and the Civil Society, focusing on the labor market. International data shows a negative correlation between union density and the quality of labor relations on one hand, and state regulation of the minimum wage on the other hand. To explain this relation, we develop a model of learning of the quality of labor relations. State regulation crowds out the possibility for workers to experiment negotiation and learn about the true cooperative nature of participants in the labor market. This crowding out effect can give rise to multiple equilibria: a 'good' equilibrium characterized by strong beliefs in cooperation, leading to high union density and low state regulation; and a 'bad' equilibrium, characterized by distrustful labor relations, low union density and strong state regulation of the minimum wage. We then use surveys on social attitudes and unionization behavior to document the relation between minimum wage legislation and the beliefs about the scope of cooperation in the labor market." (Author's abstract, IAB-Doku) ((en))
Ähnliche Treffer
auch erschienen als: NBER working paper , 14327 -
Literaturhinweis
Trends in U.S. wage inequality: revising the revisionists (2008)
Zitatform
Autor, David, Lawrence F. Katz & Melissa S. Kearney (2008): Trends in U.S. wage inequality. Revising the revisionists. In: The Review of Economics and Statistics, Jg. 90, H. 2, S. 300-323. DOI:10.1162/rest.90.2.290
Abstract
"A recent 'revisionist' literature characterizes the pronounced rise in U.S. wage inequality since 1980 as an 'episodic' event of the first half of the 1980s driven by nonmarket factors (particularly a falling real minimum wage) and concludes that continued increases in wage inequality since the late 1980s substantially reflect the mechanical confounding effects of changes in labor force composition. Analyzing data from the Current Population Survey for 1963 to 2005, we find limited support for these claims. The slowing of the growth of overall wage inequality in the 1990s hides a divergence in the paths of upper-tail (90/50) inequality - which has increased steadily since 1980, even adjusting for changes in labor force composition - and lower-tail (50/10) inequality, which rose sharply in the first half of the 1980s and plateaued or contracted thereafter. Fluctuations in the real minimum wage are not a plausible explanation for these trends since the bulk of inequality growth occurs above the median of the wage distribution. Models emphasizing rapid secular growth in the relative demand for skills - attributable to skill-biased technical change - and a sharp deceleration in the relative supply of college workers in the 1980s do an excellent job of capturing the evolution of the college/high school wage premium over four decades. But these models also imply a puzzling deceleration in relative demand growth for college workers in the early 1990s, also visible in a recent 'polarization' of skill demands in which employment has expanded in high-wage and low-wage work at the expense of middle-wage jobs. These patterns are potentially reconciled by a modified version of the skill-biased technical change hypothesis that emphasizes the role of information technology in complementing abstract (high-education) tasks and substituting for routine (middle-education) tasks." (Author's abstract, IAB-Doku) ((en))
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Literaturhinweis
The nature of occupational unemployment rates in the United States: hysteresis or structural? (2008)
Zitatform
Candelon, Bertrand, Arnaud Dupuy & Luis A. Gil-Alana (2008): The nature of occupational unemployment rates in the United States. Hysteresis or structural? (IZA discussion paper 3571), Bonn, 26 S.
Abstract
"This paper provides new evidence on the nature of occupational differences in unemployment dynamics, which is relevant for the debate between the structural or hysteresis hypotheses. We develop a procedure that permits us to test for the presence of a structural break at unknown date. Our approach allows the investigation of a broader range of persistence than the 0/1 paradigm about the order of integration, usually implemented for testing the hypothesis of hysteresis in occupational unemployment. In almost all occupations, we find support for both the structuralist and the hysteresis hypotheses, but stress the importance of estimating the degree of persistence of seasonal shocks along with the degree of long-run persistence on raw data without applying seasonal filters. Indeed hysteresis appears to be underestimated when data are initially adjusted using traditional seasonal filters." (Author's abstract, IAB-Doku) ((en))
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- Theorie
- Politik und Maßnahmen
- Arbeitsmarkt- und Lohnentwicklung
- Arbeitswelt, Personalpolitik
- Personengruppen
- Wirtschaftszweige
- Geschlecht
- geografischer Bezug
- Alter
