Labor Markets
Leaders: Gregory Acs, David Card, Michael Hout, Jesse Rothstein
The labor market was of course hit very heavily by the Great Recession, as evidenced by (a) the slow recovery of the unemployment rate, (b) and the even slower recovery of the long-term unemployment rate and the prime-age employment ratio (defined as the ratio of employed 25-54 year-olds to the population of that same age). This “jobs problem,” which is especially prominent among low-skill workers, has led to a sharp rise in the number of poor households without any working adults. It also underlies, in part, the sharp increase in the number of disability insurance claims and awards, which in turn has further reduced the supply of labor among low-skilled individuals.
If the first type of “jobs problem” is that there still are not enough of them, the second is that the jobs that are available do not always provide the requisite hours, wages, or security that are needed for a sure pathway out of poverty. As a result, low-skill individuals are not just working less but, even when they are working, there is no guarantee that their jobs will lift them and their families out of poverty. The Labor Markets RG is tasked with conducting research on these and related problems and exploiting administrative and other data to assess possible policy responses to them. We list below a few examples of the work being carried out in this group.
Long-run effects of work incentives: As nonworking poverty increases, the U.S. might well want to turn to new types of work incentive programs. Have these programs worked elsewhere?
Minimum wages and poverty: Throughout the west coast, there are a host of minimum wage “experiments” underway, experiments that have the potential to reset the low-wage labor market in quite fundamental ways. How are these experiments playing out?
Featured Examples
Labor Markets - CPI Research
Title | Author | Media | |
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State of the Union 2019: Employment | Harry J. Holzer |
State of the Union 2019: EmploymentAuthor: Harry J. HolzerPublisher: Stanford Center on Poverty and Inequality Date: 06/2019
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When Labor's Lost: Health, Family Life, Incarceration, and Education in a Time of Declining Economic Opportunity for Low-Skilled Men | Courtney Coile, Bruce Western |
When Labor's Lost: Health, Family Life, Incarceration, and Education in a Time of Declining Economic Opportunity for Low-Skilled MenAuthor: Courtney Coile, Bruce WesternPublisher: National Bureau of Economic Research Date: 02/2019 The economic progress of U.S. men has stagnated in recent decades, with declining labor force participation and weak growth in real earnings, particularly for less educated and non-white men. In this paper, we illuminate the broader context in which prime-age men are experiencing economic stagnation. We explore changes for prime-age men over time in education, mortality, morbidity, disability program receipt, family structure, and incarceration rates, indicators that may be affected by men’s sluggish economic progress or play a role in explaining it, or both. While establishing causality for such a wide range of health and other outcomes is inherently difficult, we discuss clues provided by recent research. |
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Who Becomes an Inventor in America? The Importance of Exposure to Innovation | Alex Bell, Raj Chetty, Xavier Jaravel, Neviana Petkova, John Van Reenen |
Who Becomes an Inventor in America? The Importance of Exposure to InnovationAuthor: Alex Bell, Raj Chetty, Xavier Jaravel, Neviana Petkova, John Van ReenenPublisher: The Quarterly Journal of Economics Date: 11/2018 We characterize the factors that determine who becomes an inventor in the United States, focusing on the role of inventive ability (“nature”) versus environment (“nurture”). Using deidentified data on 1.2 million inventors from patent records linked to tax records, we first show that children’s chances of becoming inventors vary sharply with characteristics at birth, such as their race, gender, and parents’ socioeconomic class. For example, children from high-income (top 1%) families are 10 times as likely to become inventors as those from below-median income families. These gaps persist even among children with similar math test scores in early childhood—which are highly predictive of innovation rates—suggesting that the gaps may be driven by differences in environment rather than abilities to innovate. We directly establish the importance of environment by showing that exposure to innovation during childhood has significant causal effects on children’s propensities to invent. Children whose families move to a high-innovation area when they are young are more likely to become inventors. These exposure effects are technology class and gender specific. Children who grow up in a neighborhood or family with a high innovation rate in a specific technology class are more likely to patent in exactly the same class. Girls are more likely to invent in a particular class if they grow up in an area with more women (but not men) who invent in that class. These gender- and technology class–specific exposure effects are more likely to be driven by narrow mechanisms, such as role-model or network effects, than factors that only affect general human capital accumulation, such as the quality of schools. Consistent with the importance of exposure effects in career selection, women and disadvantaged youth are as underrepresented among high-impact inventors as they are among inventors as a whole. These findings suggest that there are many “lost Einsteins”—individuals who would have had highly impactful inventions had they been exposed to innovation in childhood—especially among women, minorities, and children from low-income families. |
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Imprisonment and Labor Market Outcomes: Evidence from a Natural Experiment | David J. Harding, Jeffrey D. Morenoff, Anh P. Nguyen, Shawn D. Bushway |
Imprisonment and Labor Market Outcomes: Evidence from a Natural ExperimentAuthor: David J. Harding, Jeffrey D. Morenoff, Anh P. Nguyen, Shawn D. BushwayPublisher: American Journal of Sociology Date: 07/2018 Because of racially disproportionate imprisonment rates, the literature on mass incarceration has focused on the labor market consequence of imprisonment and the implications of those effects for racial inequality. Yet, the effects of imprisonment itself, as distinct from conviction, are not well understood. The authors leverage a natural experiment based on the random assignment of judges to felony cases in Michigan to examine the causal effect of being sentenced to prison as compared to probation, stratifying by race and work history. The most widespread effect of imprisonment on employment occurs through incapacitation in prison, both for the initial prison sentence and through the heightened risk of subsequent imprisonment. Negative postrelease effects of imprisonment on employment, employment stability, and employment outside the secondary labor market are concentrated among whites with a presentence work history. Postrelease effects of imprisonment on employment among those with no work history are positive but fade over time. |
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The Gender Earnings Gap in the Gig Economy: Evidence from over a Million Rideshare Drivers | Cody Cook, Rebecca Diamond, Jonathan Hall, John A. List, Paul Oyer |
The Gender Earnings Gap in the Gig Economy: Evidence from over a Million Rideshare DriversAuthor: Cody Cook, Rebecca Diamond, Jonathan Hall, John A. List, Paul OyerPublisher: NBER Date: 06/2018 The growth of the “gig” economy generates worker flexibility that, some have speculated, will favor women. We explore this by examining labor supply choices and earnings among more than a million rideshare drivers on Uber in the U.S. We document a roughly 7% gender earnings gap amongst drivers. We completely explain this gap and show that it can be entirely attributed to three factors: experience on the platform (learning-by-doing), preferences over where to work (driven largely by where drivers live and, to a lesser extent, safety), and preferences for driving speed. We do not find that men and women are differentially affected by a taste for specific hours, a return to within-week work intensity, or customer discrimination. Our results suggest that there is no reason to expect the “gig” economy to close gender differences. Even in the absence of discrimination and in flexible labor markets, women’s relatively high opportunity cost of non-paid-work time and gender-based differences in preferences and constraints can sustain a gender pay gap. |
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labor markets - CPI Affiliates
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Cecilia Elena Rouse |
Dean, Woodrow Wilson School, Lawrence and Shirley Katzman and Lewis and Anna Ernst Professor in the Economics of Education |
Princeton University |
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Francine D. Blau |
Frances Perkins Professor of Industrial and Labor Relations and Labor Economics; Research Associate, NBER; Research Fellow of IZA |
Cornell University |
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Harry Holzer |
John LaFarge Jr. SJ Professor of Public Policy, McCourt School of Public Policy; Institute Fellow, American Institutes for Research; Nonresident Senior Fellow, Economic Studies Program, Brookings Institution |
McCourt School, Georgetown University |
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Lawrence F. Katz |
Elisabeth Allison Professor of Economics, Research Associate, NBER; Co-Scientific Director and Co-Founder, J-PAL |
Harvard University |
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Marianne Page |
Professor of Economics; Deputy Director, Center for Poverty Research; Research Associate, National Bureau of Economic Research |
University of California, Davis |
Pages
Labor Markets - Other Research
Title | Author | Media | |
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Relative Sizes of Age Cohorts and Labor Force Participation of Older Workers | David Neumark, Maysen Yen |
Relative Sizes of Age Cohorts and Labor Force Participation of Older WorkersAuthor: David Neumark, Maysen YenPublisher: Demography Date: 12/2019 We study the effects of the size of older cohorts on labor force participation and wages of older workers in the United States. We use panel data on states, treating the age structure of the population as endogenous, owing to migration. When older cohorts (50–59 or 60–69) are large relative to a young cohort (aged 16–24), the evidence fits the relative supply hypothesis. However, when older cohorts are large relative to 25- to 49-year-olds, the evidence points to a relative demand shift. Thus, we need a more nuanced view than simply whether the older cohort is large relative to the population: the cohort that they are large relative to matters. |
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Skill Prices, Occupations, and Changes in the Wage Structure for Low Skilled Men | Christopher R. Taber, Nicolas A. Roys |
Skill Prices, Occupations, and Changes in the Wage Structure for Low Skilled MenAuthor: Christopher R. Taber, Nicolas A. RoysPublisher: National Bureau of Economic Research Date: 11/2019 This paper studies the effect of the change in occupational structure on wages for low skilled men. We develop a model of occupational choice in which workers have multi-dimensional skills that are exploited differently across different occupations. We allow for a rich specification of technological change which has heterogenous effects on different occupations and different parts of the skill distribution. We estimate the model combining four datasets: (1) O*NET, to measure skill intensity across occupations, (2) NLSY79, to identify life-cycle supply effects, (3) CPS (ORG), to estimate the evolution of skill prices and occupations over time, and (4) NLSY97 to see how the gain to specific skills has changed. We find that while changes in the occupational structure have affected wages of low skilled workers, the effect is not dramatic. First, the wages in traditional blue collar occupations have not fallen substantially relative to other occupations-a fact that we can not reconcile with a competitive model. Second, our decompositions show that changes in occupations explain only a small part of the patterns in wage levels over our time period. Price changes within occupation are far more important. Third, while we see an increase in the payoff to interpersonal skills, manual skills still remain the most important skill type for low educated males. |
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Gender Pay Gaps in U.S. Federal Science Agencies: An Organizational Approach | Laurel Smith-Doerr, Sharla Alegria, Kaye Fealing, Debra Fitzpatrick, Donald Tomaskovic-Devey |
Gender Pay Gaps in U.S. Federal Science Agencies: An Organizational ApproachAuthor: Laurel Smith-Doerr, Sharla Alegria, Kaye Fealing, Debra Fitzpatrick, Donald Tomaskovic-DeveyPublisher: American Journal of Sociology Date: 09/2019 This study advances understanding of gender pay gaps by examining organizational variation. The gender pay gap literature supplies mechanisms but does not attend to organizational variation; the gender and science literature provides insights on the role of masculinist culture in disciplines but misses pay gap mechanisms. A data set of federal workers allows comparison of men and women in the same jobs and workplaces. Agencies associated with traditionally masculine (engineering, physical sciences) and gender-neutral (biological, interdisciplinary sciences) fields differ. Pay-gap mechanisms vary: human capital differences explain a larger share in gender-neutral agencies, while at male-typed agencies men are frequently paid more than women within the same job. Although beyond the federal workers’ standardized pay scale, some interdisciplinary agencies more often pay men off grade, leading to higher earnings for men. Our theory of organizational variation helps explain local agency variation and how pay practices matter in specific organizational contexts. |
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On Her Own Account: How Strengthening Women's Financial Control Affects Labor Supply and Gender Norms | Erica M. Field, Rohini Pande, Natalia Rigol, Simone G. Schaner, Charity Troyer Moore |
On Her Own Account: How Strengthening Women's Financial Control Affects Labor Supply and Gender NormsAuthor: Erica M. Field, Rohini Pande, Natalia Rigol, Simone G. Schaner, Charity Troyer MoorePublisher: National Bureau of Economic Research Date: 09/2019 Can greater control over earned income incentivize women to work and influence gender norms? In collaboration with Indian government partners, we provided rural women with individual bank accounts and randomly varied whether their wages from a public workfare program were directly deposited into these accounts or into the male household head’s account (the status quo). Women in a random subset of villages were also trained on account use. In the short run, relative to women just offered bank accounts, those who also received direct deposit and training increased their labor supply in the public and private sectors. In the long run, gender norms liberalized: women who received direct deposit and training became more accepting of female work, and their husbands perceived fewer social costs to having a wife who works. These effects were concentrated in households with otherwise lower levels of, and stronger norms against, female work. Women in these households also worked more in the long run and became more empowered. These patterns are consistent with models of household decision-making in which increases in bargaining power from greater control over income interact with, and influence, gender norms. |
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Racialized Re-Entry: Labor Market Inequality After Incarceration | Western, Bruce, Sirois, Catherine |
Racialized Re-Entry: Labor Market Inequality After IncarcerationAuthor: Western, Bruce, Sirois, CatherinePublisher: Social Forces Date: 10/2018 Why do some people succeed in the labor market after incarceration but others do not? We study the transition from prison to work with data on monthly employment and earnings for a sample of men and women observed for a year after incarceration. More than in earlier research, the data provide detailed measurement of temporary and informal employment and richly describe the labor market disadvantages of formerly incarcerated men and women. We find that half the sample is jobless in any given month and average earnings are well below the poverty level. By jointly modeling employment and earnings, we show that blacks and Hispanics have lower total earnings than whites even after accounting for health, human capital, social background, crime and criminal justice involvement, and job readiness. A decomposition attributes most of the earnings gaps to racial and ethnic inequalities in employment. Qualitative interviews suggest that whites more than blacks and Hispanics find stable, high-paying jobs through social networks. These findings support a hypothesis of racialized re-entry that helps explain the unusual disadvantage of African Americans at the nexus of the penal system and the labor market. |
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