Most skills acquired through on-the-job training may be specific to an occupation and therefore transferable to some but not all firms. This paper explores the relationship between the size of the local market for an occupation-specific skill and job-training outcomes. The Stevens (1994) model of training predicts that as market size increases, job turnover increases and training becomes more general. I test these predictions using data on blue-collar workers and variation in market size across U.S. metropolitan areas. The empirical results support the theoretical predictions and the impacts are most relevant at low levels of market size.on-the-job training, occupation, human capital, local labor markets, market size
This paper quantifies the combined effect on-the-job training and workers' on-the-job learning decis...
This paper assesses the trade-off between acquiring specialized skills targeted for a particular occ...
This article studies how portable skills accumulated in the labor market are. Using rich data on tas...
Most skills acquired through on-the-job training may be specific to an occupation and therefore tran...
Most skills acquired through on-the-job training may be specific to an occupation and therefore tran...
Previous studies assume that labor market skills are either fully general or specific to a firm. Thi...
Following suggestions from theoretical and empirical literature on agglomeration and on social retur...
This paper studies how the size of the labour market aff ects workers' decision to invest in human c...
This paper proposes a new measurement for the specificity of occupations based on a content analysis...
Following suggestions from theoretical and empirical literature on agglomeration and on social retur...
This study, based upon detailed information from over 2,500 employers and 7,500 residents in the Con...
This paper proposes a new measurement for the specificity of occupations based on a content analysis...
In finding a career, workers tend to make numerous job changes, with the majority of \u27complex\u27...
In this paper we challenge the conventional assumption that accumulated human capital can be divided...
This paper studies how the size of the labour market affects workers' decisions to invest in human c...
This paper quantifies the combined effect on-the-job training and workers' on-the-job learning decis...
This paper assesses the trade-off between acquiring specialized skills targeted for a particular occ...
This article studies how portable skills accumulated in the labor market are. Using rich data on tas...
Most skills acquired through on-the-job training may be specific to an occupation and therefore tran...
Most skills acquired through on-the-job training may be specific to an occupation and therefore tran...
Previous studies assume that labor market skills are either fully general or specific to a firm. Thi...
Following suggestions from theoretical and empirical literature on agglomeration and on social retur...
This paper studies how the size of the labour market aff ects workers' decision to invest in human c...
This paper proposes a new measurement for the specificity of occupations based on a content analysis...
Following suggestions from theoretical and empirical literature on agglomeration and on social retur...
This study, based upon detailed information from over 2,500 employers and 7,500 residents in the Con...
This paper proposes a new measurement for the specificity of occupations based on a content analysis...
In finding a career, workers tend to make numerous job changes, with the majority of \u27complex\u27...
In this paper we challenge the conventional assumption that accumulated human capital can be divided...
This paper studies how the size of the labour market affects workers' decisions to invest in human c...
This paper quantifies the combined effect on-the-job training and workers' on-the-job learning decis...
This paper assesses the trade-off between acquiring specialized skills targeted for a particular occ...
This article studies how portable skills accumulated in the labor market are. Using rich data on tas...