Search results for "Percentage point"

showing 2 items of 12 documents

Employment effects of skills around the world: Evidence from the PIAAC

2020

Using an international survey that directly assesses the cognitive skills of participants, the author studies the effect of skills on employment in 32 countries. On average, a 1 standard deviation increase in numeracy is associated with an 8.4 percentage point increase in the probability of being employed, reducing the probability of being out of the labour force and unemployed by 6.4 and 2.1 percentage points, respectively. After controlling for numeracy, the estimated employment effect of years in education falls by one third, from 2.7 to 1.8 percentage points. Notably, the employment effect of skills is more pronounced in countries with higher unemployment.

Organizational Behavior and Human Resource ManagementActuarial scienceStrategy and Managementmedia_common.quotation_subjecteducation05 social sciencesInternational comparisons050209 industrial relationsInternational surveyPercentage pointStandard deviationNumeracyManagement of Technology and Innovation0502 economics and businessUnemploymentEconomicsDemographic economicsCognitive skill050207 economicsmedia_commonInternational Labour Review
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Trends and cycles in U.S. job mobility

2021

Recent studies document a decline in U.S. labor-market fluidity from as early as the 1970s on. Making use of the Annual Social and Economic (ASEC) supplement to the Current Population Survey (CPS), I uncover a pronounced increase in job-to-job mobility from the 1970s to the 1990s, i.e., the annual share of continuously employed job-to-job movers rises from 5.9 percent of the labor force in 1975–1979 to 8.8 percent in 1995–1999. Job-to-job mobility exhibits a downward trend only since the turn of the millennium. In order to provide a formal economic interpretation, I additionally estimate the parameters of the random on-the-job search model. Furthermore, I document that job-to-job mobility h…

Productive efficiencyEconomics and EconometricsKolmogorov forward equationCurrent Population Surveyon‐the‐job searchOrder (exchange)search and matching0502 economics and businessddc:330long‐run trendsEconomicsBusiness cycleUnemployment rate050207 economicsEconomic interpretation050208 financeCurrent Population Surveyeconomic fluctuations330 Wirtschaft05 social sciencesjob mobilityPercentage point330 Economicsbusiness cyclesSearch modelFokker–Planck equationDemographic economicsproductive efficiencyThe Manchester School
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