长期失业的后果:来自相关调查和行政数据的证据

Katharine G. Abraham, J. Haltiwanger, Kristin Sandusky, James R. Spletzer
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引用次数: 4

摘要

众所周知,长期失业者在劳动力市场上的表现比短期失业者更糟糕,但不太清楚为什么会这样。一种可能的解释是,长期失业者是“坏苹果”,他们从一开始就前景不佳(异质性)。另一种说法是,它们的糟糕结果是它们经历的长期失业(依赖国家)的结果。我们使用当前人口调查(CPS)的数据,将失业人员与同一个人的工资记录联系起来,以区分这些相互竞争的解释。对于我们样本中的每个人,我们都有工资记录数据,涵盖了该个人在CPS中被观察的季度之前的20个季度到之后的11个季度。这为我们提供了之前和之后的工作历史的丰富信息,这些信息是以前的研究人员无法获得的,我们使用这些信息来控制可能影响随后劳动力市场结果的个体异质性。即使有这些控制措施,我们发现失业持续时间对后续就业的可能性有强烈的负面影响。这一结果对于解释可能影响求职成功率的劳动力市场环境差异的努力是强有力的。研究结果与异质性(“坏苹果”)解释长期失业者比短期失业者更糟糕的原因不一致,并支持国家依赖解释失业持续时间与随后的就业率之间的负相关关系。我们还发现,较长的失业持续时间与较低的后续收入有关,尽管这主要是由于长期失业的人后续就业的可能性较低,而不是由于他们找到工作后的收入较低。
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The Consequences of Long-Term Unemployment: Evidence from Linked Survey and Administrative Data
It is well known that the long-term unemployed fare worse in the labor market than the short-term unemployed, but less clear why this is so. One potential explanation is that the long-term unemployed are “bad apples” who had poorer prospects from the outset of their spells (heterogeneity). Another is that their bad outcomes are a consequence of the extended unemployment they have experienced (state dependence). We use Current Population Survey (CPS) data on unemployed individuals linked to wage records for the same people to distinguish between these competing explanations. For each person in our sample, we have wage record data that cover the period from 20 quarters before to 11 quarters after the quarter in which the person is observed in the CPS. This gives us rich information about prior and subsequent work histories not available to previous researchers that we use to control for individual heterogeneity that might be affecting subsequent labor market outcomes. Even with these controls in place, we find that unemployment duration has a strongly negative effect on the likelihood of subsequent employment. This result is robust to efforts to account for differences in labor market circumstances that might affect job-finding success rates. The findings are inconsistent with the heterogeneity (“bad apple”) explanation for why the long-term unemployed fare worse than the short-term unemployed and lend support to the state dependence explanation for the negative association between unemployment duration and subsequent employment rates. We also find that longer unemployment durations are associated with lower subsequent earnings, though this is mainly attributable to the long-term unemployed having a lower likelihood of subsequent employment rather than to their having lower earnings once a job is found.
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