A sequential decomposition of the drop in collective bargaining coverage
In: Discussion paper 15-039
In: Environmental and resource economics, environmental management
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In: Discussion paper 15-039
In: Environmental and resource economics, environmental management
In: Jahrbücher für Nationalökonomie und Statistik 235,4/5
In: Themenheft
In: Discussion paper No. 15-022
In: Labour Markets, Human Resources and Social Policy
In: Discussion paper 14-026
In: Labour markets, human resources and social policy
In: Discussion paper 13-107
In: Labour markets, human resources and social policy
In: Discussion paper 12-023
In: Labour economics, human resources and social policy
This paper develops and implements a new benchmarking approach for labor market regions. Based on panel data for regions, we use nonparametric matching techniques to account for observed labor market characteristics and for spatial proximity. As the benchmark, we estimate the counterfactual distribution of labor market outcomes for a region based on outcomes of similar regions. This allows to measure both the rank (relative performance) and the absolute performance based on the actual outcome for a region. Our outcome variable of interest is the hiring rate among the unemployed. We implement different similarity measures to account for differences in labor market conditions and spatial proximity, and we choose the tuning parameters in our matching approach based on a cross-validation procedure. The results show that both observed labor market characteristics and spatial proximity are important features to successfully match regions. Specifically, the modified Zhao (2004) distance measure and geographic distance in logs work best in our applications. Our estimated performance measures remain quite stable over time.
In: ZEW Discussion Paper 12-020
In: Zeitschrift für Arbeitsmarktforschung 41,2/3
In: Themenheft
In: Conferences on new political economy: CNPE, Band 25, Heft 1, S. 31-34
ISSN: 1861-8340
In: Discussion paper 16-012
In: Labour markets, human resources and social policy
In: Discussion paper 06-44
This paper studies the relationship between employment and wage structures in West Germany based on the IAB employment subsample 1975{1997. It extends the analytical framework of Card and Lemieux (2001) which simultaneously includes skill and age as important dimensions of heterogeneity. After having identified cohort effects in skill wage premia and in the evolution of relative employment measures, we estimate elasticities of substitution between employees in three different skill groups and between those of different age, taking account of the endogeneity of wages and employment. Compared to estimates in the related literature, we find a rather high degree of substitutability. Drawing on the estimated parameters, we simulate the magnitude of wage changes within the respective skill groups that would have been necessary to halve skill-specific unemployment rates in 1997. The required nominal wage reductions range from 8.8 to 12.2% and are the higher the lower the employees' skill level.
In: Discussion paper 05-95
Equilibrium search theory suggests that the wage distribution in a cross section of workers is closely related to labor market transitions and associated wage changes. Accordingly, jobtojob transitions are central in explaining the wage distribution. This paper uses the IAB employment subsample to describe the empirics of labor market transitions and the wage structure in Germany. Motivated by search theory, we use the data to explore descriptively labor market transitions and features of the wage structure. We find that labor market transition rates vary substantially over the business cycle and with individual characteristics. Regarding jobtojob transitions, we find considerable wage changes. Most job changes involve considerable gains, but a number of individuals incurs a remarkable loss. Regarding the wage structure, we find strong effects of jobtojob transitions, age, and education on wage mobility. Based on our descriptive analysis, we conclude that indeed a close relationship exists between wages and labor market transitions as predicted by search theory. However, the noticeable share of wage losses following jobtojob changes contradicts a simple search theoretic perspective.
In: Diskussionspapiere der DFG-Forschergruppe Heterogene Arbeit 05,02
In: Economics of transition and institutional change, Band 30, Heft 3, S. 621-661
ISSN: 2577-6983
AbstractJob loss expectations were widespread amongst workers in East Germany following reunification with West Germany. Though experiencing a large negative employment shock, East German workers were nevertheless overpessimistic immediately after reunification with respect to their job loss risk. Over time, job loss expectations fell and converged to West German levels, which was driven by a stabilizing economic environment and by an adaptation of the interpretation of economic signals with workers learning to distinguish individual risk from firm‐level risk. In fact, conditional on actual job loss risk, East German workers quickly caught up to West Germans regarding the share of correctly predicted job losses.
In: Series: SOEPpapers on Multidisciplinary Panel Data Research
In: No. 822
In: gbv-ppn:856918350
In: http://hdl.handle.net/10419/130575
Most countries show a residency discount in rents for sitting tenants. In the wake of strong rent increases and housing shortages, Germany implemented a reform in 2001 to curtail rent increases. Based on linked housing-tenant data for Germany, this paper estimates panel OLS and quantile regressions of rents within tenancies. The results show that rents deflated by the CPI increase strongly from 1984 until the reform in 2001, and there is a reversal in the trend afterwards. Before the reform, there is a significant residence discount which decreases in absolute value with tenure. The reform reduces rents, in particular for expensive apartments and for new leases. There is no residency discount after the reform.
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