The Welfare Effects of Involuntary Part-Time Work

Daniel Borowczyk-Martins, E. Lalé
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引用次数: 11

Abstract

Employed individuals in the U.S. are increasingly more likely to work part-time involuntarily than to be unemployed. Spells of involuntary part-time work are different from unemployment spells: a full-time worker who takes on a part-time job suffers an earnings loss while remaining employed, and is unlikely to receive income compensation from publicly-provided insurance programs.We analyze these differences through the lens of an incomplete-market, job-search model featuring unemployment risk alongside an additional risk of involuntary part-time employment.A calibration of the model consistent with U.S. institutions and labor-market dynamics shows that involuntary part-time work generates lower welfare losses relative to unemployment. This finding relies critically on the much higher probability to return to full-time employment from part-time work. We interpret it as a premium in access to full-time work faced by involuntary part-time workers, and use our model to tabulate its value in consumption-equivalent units.
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非自愿兼职工作的福利效应
在美国,有工作的人越来越有可能非自愿地做兼职,而不是失业。非自愿兼职不同于失业:全职工人从事兼职工作,在继续工作的同时遭受收入损失,而且不太可能从公共提供的保险计划中获得收入补偿。我们通过一个不完全市场的视角来分析这些差异,以失业风险和非自愿兼职工作的额外风险为特征的求职模型。与美国制度和劳动力市场动态相一致的模型校准表明,相对于失业,非自愿兼职工作产生的福利损失更低。这一发现主要依赖于从兼职工作回到全职工作的可能性要高得多。我们将其解释为非自愿兼职工人获得全职工作的溢价,并使用我们的模型以消费当量单位计算其价值。
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