Thursday, 6 October, 2016

16:30 | Macro Research Seminar

Moritz Kuhn, Ph.D. (BGSE, U. of Bonn) “Earnings Losses and Labor Mobility Over the Lifecycle”

Moritz Kuhn, Ph.D.

BGSE (Bonn Graduate School of Economics), University of Bonn, Germany


Authors: Philip Jung and Moritz Kuhn

Abstract: Large and persistent earnings losses following displacement have adverse consequences for the individual worker and the macroeconomy. Leading models cannot explain their size and disagree on the sources. Two mean-reverting forces make earnings losses transitory in these models: search as an upward force allows workers to climb back up the job ladder; and separations as a downward force make non-displaced workers fall down the job ladder. We show that job stability at the top rather than search frictions at the bottom is the main driver of persistent earnings losses. We provide new empirical evidence on job stability and develop a life-cycle search model to explain the facts. Our model offers a quantitative reconciliation of key stylized facts of the U.S. labor market: large worker flows, a large share of stable jobs, and persistent earnings shocks. We explain the size of earnings losses by dampening the downward force. Regarding the sources, we find that over 85 % stem from the loss of a particularly good job at the top of the job ladder. We apply the model to study the effectiveness of two labor market policies, retraining and placement support, from the Dislocated Worker Program. We find that both are ineffective in reducing earnings losses in line with the program evaluation literature.

JEL: E24, J63, J64

Keywords: Lifecycle labor market mobility, Job tenure, Earnings Losses, Worker-and match-specific skills


Full Text:  “Earnings Losses and Labor Mobility Over the Lifecycle”

 

 

 

 

18:10 | Economics Discovery Hub

Michael Hagan (Northwestern) “The Alice in Wonderland Model of Irrational Decision Making in Healthcare”

Since it is basically inelastic, Healthcare provides unique challenges to economists.  In this short seminar we will explore several case studies in Healthcare. Emphasis is placed on the ramifications and consequences of public pressure in policy making as well as patient irrationality in making decisions that affect their own health.  

About the facilitator: Michael Hagan, DrPH
Adjunct Faculty at Northwestern, Chicago. Senior leader in Health Economics &Outcome Research (HEOR). Michael has been providing solutions to the global commercialization of pharmaceutical products for the last 22 years.