Explaining the increase in on-the-job search
Authors: Mikal Skuterud
Overview
Abstract (English)
Evidence from the Labour Force Survey (LFS) reveals that the percentage of employed workers searching for other jobs more than doubled in Canada between 1976 and 1995. Comparable evidence from the Current Population Survey (CPS), Panel Study of Income Dynamics (PSID), and National Longitudinal Survey (NLS) suggests that the U.S. experienced a remarkably similar upward trend in on-the-job search (OJS) over this period. Using U.S. data to supplement the Canadian data wherever possible, this paper attempts to explain this long-term, secular trend in Canadian OJS rates by performing decomposition and industry-level analyses, and by considering concomitant changes in employer-to-employer transition rates and the wage returns to job changing. The results from both countries suggest that an important part of the upward trend in OJS rates is not explained by compositional effects, including cohort effects. The OJS increase seems also to have occurred independently of rising job insecurity due to sector-specific demand shocks and trends in the dispersion of log wage residuals. The data are most consistent with a long-term decrease in search costs.
Abstract (French)
Please note that abstracts only appear in the language of the publication and might not have a translation.
Details
Type | Working paper (online) |
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Author | Mikal Skuterud |
Publication Year | 2005 |
Title | Explaining the increase in on-the-job search |
Series | Family and Labour Studies Division, Statistics Canada |
City | Ottawa, ON |
Publication Language | English |
- Mikal Skuterud
- Working paper (online)
- Explaining the increase in on-the-job search
- Mikal Skuterud
- Family and Labour Studies Division, Statistics Canada
- 2005