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Author: Guo, Naijia
Resulting in 2 citations.
1. |
Guo, Naijia |
The Effect of an Early Career Recession on Schooling and Lifetime Welfare International Economic Review 59,3 (August 2018): 1511-1545. Also: https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/abs/10.1111/iere.12312 Cohort(s): NLSY79, NLSY97 Publisher: Blackwell Publishing, Inc. => Wiley Online Keyword(s): Current Population Survey (CPS) / CPS-Fertility Supplement; Economic Changes/Recession; Job Search; Schooling; Work History This paper evaluates the lifetime welfare and labor market consequences of experiencing a recession during youth, using a directed search equilibrium model with heterogeneous agents and aggregate shocks. |
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Bibliography Citation
Guo, Naijia. "The Effect of an Early Career Recession on Schooling and Lifetime Welfare." International Economic Review 59,3 (August 2018): 1511-1545.
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2. |
Guo, Naijia |
The Impact of an Early Career Recession on Schooling and Lifetime Welfare Ph.D. Dissertation, Department of Economics, University of Pennsylvania, 2014 Cohort(s): NLSY79, NLSY97 Publisher: ProQuest Dissertations & Theses (PQDT) Keyword(s): Economic Changes/Recession; Educational Attainment; Human Capital; Labor Supply; Life Course; Mobility, Job; Wages Permission to reprint the abstract has not been received from the publisher. This paper evaluates the long-term welfare consequences from experiencing a recession as youths, taking into account the impact on schooling, future job mobility, human capital accumulation, labor supply and wages. The paper also explores the mechanisms that account for lifetime wage changes by decomposing those changes into different channels: changes from schooling, from work experience, and from job mobility. To achieve these goals, this paper develops and estimates a search equilibrium model with heterogenous agents and aggregate shocks. The model is an extension of a directed search model, the Block Recursive Equilibrium framework of Menzio and Shi (2010), which remains tractable when it is solved outside of the steady state. The counterfactual analysis shows that experiencing the 1981-1982 recession at age 16-22 causes a 2.2% to 3.0% loss in lifetime welfare. Endogenizing schooling decision avoids overestimation of the welfare loss. The wage decomposition shows that the loss from job mobility explains the majority of the wage loss during the recession, and the loss in experience and tenure persists long after the recession. |
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Bibliography Citation
Guo, Naijia. The Impact of an Early Career Recession on Schooling and Lifetime Welfare. Ph.D. Dissertation, Department of Economics, University of Pennsylvania, 2014. |