The Effects of Labor Market Conditions on Working Time: The US-EU Experience
50 Pages Posted: 28 May 2008
Date Written: May 2007
Abstract
We consider a labor market search model where, by working longer hours, individuals acquire greater skills and thereby obtain better jobs. We show that job inequality, which leads to within-skill wage differences, gives incentives to work longer hours. By contrast, a higher probability of losing jobs, a longer duration of unemployment, and in general a less tight labor market discourage working time. We show that the different evolution of labor market conditions in the US and in Continental Europe over the last three decades can quantitatively explain the diverging evolution of the number of hours worked per employee across the two sides of the Atlantic. It can also explain why the fraction of prime age male workers working very long hours has increased substantially in the US, after reverting a trend of secular decline.
Keywords: Human capital, search, unemployment, wage inequality, working hours
JEL Classification: E24, G31, J31
Suggested Citation: Suggested Citation
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