We document empirical life cycle profiles of wages, earnings, and hours of work for pay from the Panel Study of Income Dynamics, following the same workers for up to four decades. For six of the eight cohorts we analyze the wage profile does not decline with age (not before 65, at least), while the earnings profile always does. The discrepancy is explained by a sharp drop in the hours of work for pay profile beginning shortly after age 50, when many workers start a smooth transition into retirement by working progressively fewer hours. This pattern is not an artifact of staggered abrupt retirement, and is robust to attrition and selection-correction (i.e., taking into account that the composition of our sample, for a given cohort, ch...
We develop a life-cycle model of the labor market in which different worker-firm matches have differ...
Our aim in this paper is, first, to derive a model capable of explaining the stylized fact that fluc...
The current literature offers two views on the nature of the income process. According to the first ...
We document empirical life cycle profiles of wages, earnings, and hours of work for pay from the Pan...
We investigate wage-hours contracts within a four-period rent sharing model that incorporates asymme...
Ce Working Paper fait l'objet d'une publication in International Journal of Manpower, Emerald, 2017,...
After dropping for a century, the average retirement age for U.S. males seems to have leveled off i...
How does the persistence of earnings change over the life cycle? Do workers at different ages face t...
This paper proposes a non-neoclassical model of earnings and advancement over the working lifecycle....
Classical literature uses the cross-sectional age-earnings profile to describe how the earnings evo...
How does the persistence of earnings change over the life cycle? Do workers at different ages face t...
We document systematic and significant time variation in US lifecycle non-durable consumption profil...
We develop a life-cycle model of the labor market in which different worker-firm matches have differ...
We propose a new macroeconomic mechanism for generating patterns in age-earnings profiles based on d...
Paper [I] analyzes the dynamic properties of life-cycle earnings in Sweden using microdata. We study...
We develop a life-cycle model of the labor market in which different worker-firm matches have differ...
Our aim in this paper is, first, to derive a model capable of explaining the stylized fact that fluc...
The current literature offers two views on the nature of the income process. According to the first ...
We document empirical life cycle profiles of wages, earnings, and hours of work for pay from the Pan...
We investigate wage-hours contracts within a four-period rent sharing model that incorporates asymme...
Ce Working Paper fait l'objet d'une publication in International Journal of Manpower, Emerald, 2017,...
After dropping for a century, the average retirement age for U.S. males seems to have leveled off i...
How does the persistence of earnings change over the life cycle? Do workers at different ages face t...
This paper proposes a non-neoclassical model of earnings and advancement over the working lifecycle....
Classical literature uses the cross-sectional age-earnings profile to describe how the earnings evo...
How does the persistence of earnings change over the life cycle? Do workers at different ages face t...
We document systematic and significant time variation in US lifecycle non-durable consumption profil...
We develop a life-cycle model of the labor market in which different worker-firm matches have differ...
We propose a new macroeconomic mechanism for generating patterns in age-earnings profiles based on d...
Paper [I] analyzes the dynamic properties of life-cycle earnings in Sweden using microdata. We study...
We develop a life-cycle model of the labor market in which different worker-firm matches have differ...
Our aim in this paper is, first, to derive a model capable of explaining the stylized fact that fluc...
The current literature offers two views on the nature of the income process. According to the first ...