This paper studies the role of wages and job benefits in job search behavior. We use wage and benefit data from a market-leading employer review platform and run a large-scale randomized control trial on an online job board to estimate the elasticity of job seekers' applications to posted wages and their willingness to pay for job benefits. A 10% higher wage increases job seekers' probability to view and apply to an ad by 3-5%. Many job benefits are highly valued by job seekers: Home office and company cars are valued at around 15 percent of wages, company-provided child care at 10 percent and and parking spots at around 7 percent of wages. The average vacancy offers job benefits worth 25 percent of wages. We further document that higher-paying firms typically offer more amenities. Taking the distribution and valuation of job benefits into account, we show that job value inequality is significantly higher than wage inequality.
Date
28.1.2025
, Noon until 1:30 p.m.
Speaker
Andreas Gulyas (Universität Mannheim)
Venue
Friedrich-Alexander-Universität
Fachbereich Wirtschafts- und Sozialwissenschaften (FAU WiSo)
Lange Gasse 20
90403 Nürnberg
room LG 0.423
Registration
Researchers who would like to participate, please send an email to macrolabor.seminar@gmail.com