This article reconsiders the case for sectoral labor reallocation's role in the jobless recovery. The authors review and critique previous attempts to measure sectoral reallocation, with a particular emphasis on the recent contribution of Groshen and Potter (2003). Their conclusion, based on an extension of Rissman (1997), is that the need of reallocate employment across industries was lower during the most recent two recessions than in previous business cycles. Therefore, sectoral reallocation likely has not played an important role in the jobless recoveries.Labor mobility ; Employment (Economic theory)
Some types of jobs lost during recessions are never recovered, which suggests some unemployed worker...
Since the early 1990s, recoveries from recessions in the US have been plagued by weak employment gro...
This master thesis uses Portuguese employee-employer matched data covering more than 30 years to ana...
This study first defines skill-biased sectoral shift using two stylized facts. Specifically, the shi...
Most analysts believe the U.S. economy is now recoveringfrom the last recession. This belief is bols...
Job polarization refers to the shrinking share of employment in middle-skill, routine occupations ex...
We study the effect of mean-preserving idiosyncratic industry shocks on business cycle outcomes. We ...
Job polarization refers to the shrinking share of employment in middle-skill, routine oc-cupations e...
One employment survey said 800,000 jobs were lost in the two years after the recession ended in Nove...
open2noThis paper appraises the literature on the macroeconomic effects of job reallocations. We ove...
The business cycle in the United States has changed in fundamental ways in the last three decades. A...
In January 2005, after more than three years of sluggish employmentgrowth, the U.S. economy finally ...
This article reviews trends in employment growth during the recent recovery, including new evidence ...
The reallocation of labour is one of the key functions of labour markets. The large scale turnover o...
Job loss has a permanent negative effect on life-time earnings and, in general, on labor market outc...
Some types of jobs lost during recessions are never recovered, which suggests some unemployed worker...
Since the early 1990s, recoveries from recessions in the US have been plagued by weak employment gro...
This master thesis uses Portuguese employee-employer matched data covering more than 30 years to ana...
This study first defines skill-biased sectoral shift using two stylized facts. Specifically, the shi...
Most analysts believe the U.S. economy is now recoveringfrom the last recession. This belief is bols...
Job polarization refers to the shrinking share of employment in middle-skill, routine occupations ex...
We study the effect of mean-preserving idiosyncratic industry shocks on business cycle outcomes. We ...
Job polarization refers to the shrinking share of employment in middle-skill, routine oc-cupations e...
One employment survey said 800,000 jobs were lost in the two years after the recession ended in Nove...
open2noThis paper appraises the literature on the macroeconomic effects of job reallocations. We ove...
The business cycle in the United States has changed in fundamental ways in the last three decades. A...
In January 2005, after more than three years of sluggish employmentgrowth, the U.S. economy finally ...
This article reviews trends in employment growth during the recent recovery, including new evidence ...
The reallocation of labour is one of the key functions of labour markets. The large scale turnover o...
Job loss has a permanent negative effect on life-time earnings and, in general, on labor market outc...
Some types of jobs lost during recessions are never recovered, which suggests some unemployed worker...
Since the early 1990s, recoveries from recessions in the US have been plagued by weak employment gro...
This master thesis uses Portuguese employee-employer matched data covering more than 30 years to ana...