Abstract
In this paper, I quantify the contribution of occupation-specific shocks and skills to unemployment duration and its cyclical dynamics. I quantify specific skills using microdata on wages, estimating occupational switching cost as a function of the oc-cupations' difference in skills. The productivity shocks are consistent with job finding rates by occupation. For the period 1995-2013, the model captures 69.5% of long-term unemployment in the data, while a uniform finding rate delivers only 47.2%. In the Great Recession, the model predicts 72.9% of the long-term unemployment that existed in the data whereas a uniform finding rate would predict 57.8%.
Cite
CITATION STYLE
Wiczer, D. (2015). Long-Term Unemployment: Attached and Mismatched? Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis, Working Papers, 2015(042). https://doi.org/10.20955/wp.2015.042
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