We examine job durations of German workers using linked employer–employee data. Our results indicate that exit rates are strongly influenced by firm characteristics. The effects of some of these characteristics, however, are limited to particular job positions or skill groups. There is clear evidence for a sorting process whereby workers with long expected job durations are matched to firms offering stable employment (and vice versa). An extension of the model to a competing-risks framework shows that both individual and firm-level characteristics differ greatly in their impact on job exit to different destination states. Among the substantive results, it would appear that works councils decrease exit both to unemployment and to new jobs, b...
Employment tenure, job turnover and returns to general and specific skills are examined for male wor...
The OECD (1993) has documented that the majority of workers in industrialised countries can look for...
This study compares the duration of new job matches in the east and west German labour market that f...
The authors examine job durations of German workers using the Linked Employer–Employee Data of the I...
We examine job durations of German workers using linked employer–employee data. Our results indicate...
We examine job durations of German workers using a linked employeremployee dataset. The descriptive ...
Recent labor market reforms in Germany aim, among other things, at reducing unemployment by restrict...
This paper studies the importance of employer-specific determinants in escaping low earnings in Germ...
Job mobility and employment durations can be explained by different theoretical approaches, such as ...
A central argument for the deregulation of employment contracts is that fixed-term contracts boost e...
We use a simple non-parametric regression approach to measure the relationship between employment gr...
We want to study the relation of age-specific programmes at the firm-level on transitions out of emp...
The employment period is of central importance in the life course and therefore ensuring job stabil...
This study compares the duration of new job matches in the east and west German labour market that f...
Employment tenure, job turnover and returns to general and specific skills are examined for male wor...
The OECD (1993) has documented that the majority of workers in industrialised countries can look for...
This study compares the duration of new job matches in the east and west German labour market that f...
The authors examine job durations of German workers using the Linked Employer–Employee Data of the I...
We examine job durations of German workers using linked employer–employee data. Our results indicate...
We examine job durations of German workers using a linked employeremployee dataset. The descriptive ...
Recent labor market reforms in Germany aim, among other things, at reducing unemployment by restrict...
This paper studies the importance of employer-specific determinants in escaping low earnings in Germ...
Job mobility and employment durations can be explained by different theoretical approaches, such as ...
A central argument for the deregulation of employment contracts is that fixed-term contracts boost e...
We use a simple non-parametric regression approach to measure the relationship between employment gr...
We want to study the relation of age-specific programmes at the firm-level on transitions out of emp...
The employment period is of central importance in the life course and therefore ensuring job stabil...
This study compares the duration of new job matches in the east and west German labour market that f...
Employment tenure, job turnover and returns to general and specific skills are examined for male wor...
The OECD (1993) has documented that the majority of workers in industrialised countries can look for...
This study compares the duration of new job matches in the east and west German labour market that f...