This paper uses data from the 1968 through 1997 survey waves of the Panel Study of Income Dynamics to analyze how the long-term costs of job loss vary by a worker's post-displacement migration status. Results from the analysis show that those individuals who move within the first 2 years after a job loss experience lower earnings losses, lower reductions in hours worked, and smaller increases in time unemployed when compared to a group of displaced workers who are not geographically mobile during the early years following this life event. Workers who move within the first 2 years after displacement face a lower probability of homeownership when compared to their non-mobile counterparts. However, this lower probability is short-lived.
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CITATION STYLE
Jolly, N. A. (2015). Geographic Mobility and the Costs of Job Loss. B.E. Journal of Economic Analysis and Policy, 15(4), 1793–1829. https://doi.org/10.1515/bejeap-2014-0131