Labor market regulation and the cyclicality of involuntary part-time work

IF 1.6 Q2 INDUSTRIAL RELATIONS & LABOR Journal for Labour Market Research Pub Date : 2024-03-10 DOI:10.1186/s12651-024-00363-0
Theresa Markefke, Rebekka Müller-Rehm
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Abstract

In times of economic crisis, many employers in liberal labor markets reduce their employees’ working hours, which leads to an increase in the incidence of involuntary part-time work. We analyze the effectiveness of working time regulation in preventing such an increase during downswings. For this we look at the case of Germany, where hours adjustments are highly restricted by law. Using a state-level panel regression approach, we find that the incidence of involuntary part-time work is positively associated with the unemployment rate but that the association is much weaker than in the US and in the UK. Transition probabilities between employment states over the cycle suggest two particular underlying mechanisms: First, already employed workers are more likely to want a full-time position in economic downturns (“added hours effect”). Second, job seekers make concessions with regards to their desired hours when labor market conditions are bad (“reservation hours effect”). We are the first to document these margins of cyclical hours adjustments which are fundamentally different from those in less regulated labor markets, where the cyclicality of involuntary part-time work is predominantly driven by hours changes at the same employer.

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劳动力市场监管与非自愿兼职工作的周期性
在经济危机时期,自由劳动力市场上的许多雇主都会减少员工的工作时间,从而导致非自愿兼职工作的发生率上升。我们分析了工作时间规定在防止经济下滑期间非自愿兼职工作增加方面的有效性。为此,我们研究了德国的案例,在德国,工时调整受到法律的严格限制。通过使用州级面板回归方法,我们发现非自愿兼职工作的发生率与失业率呈正相关,但这种相关性比美国和英国要弱得多。周期内就业状态之间的转换概率表明有两种特殊的内在机制:首先,已经就业的工人在经济不景气时更有可能想要一份全职工作("额外工时效应")。其次,当劳动力市场状况不佳时,求职者会在其期望工时方面做出让步("保留工时效应")。我们首次记录了这些周期性工时调整的边际,这与监管较少的劳动力市场上的周期性工时调整有着本质区别,在后者中,非自愿兼职工作的周期性主要由同一雇主的工时变化所驱动。
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来源期刊
Journal for Labour Market Research
Journal for Labour Market Research INDUSTRIAL RELATIONS & LABOR-
CiteScore
2.60
自引率
5.90%
发文量
17
审稿时长
15 weeks
期刊介绍: The Journal for Labour Market Research is a journal in the interdisciplinary field of labour market research. As of 2016 the Journal publishes Open Access. The journal follows international research standards and strives for international visibility. With its empirical and multidisciplinary orientation, the journal publishes papers in English language concerning the labour market, employment, education / training and careers. Papers dealing with country-specific labour market aspects are suitable if they adopt an innovative approach and address a topic of interest to a wider international audience. The journal is distinct from most others in the field, as it provides a platform for contributions from a broad range of academic disciplines. The editors encourage replication studies, as well as studies based on international comparisons. Accordingly, authors are expected to make their empirical data available to readers who might wish to replicate a published work on request. Submitted papers, who have passed a prescreening process by the editors, are generally reviewed by two peer reviewers, who remain anonymous for the author. In addition to the regular issues, special issues covering selected topics are published at least once a year. As of April 2015 the Journal for Labour Market Research has a "No Revisions" option for submissions (see ‘Instructions for Authors’).
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