Employment Hysteresis from the Great Recession

S-Tier
Journal: Journal of Political Economy
Year: 2019
Volume: 127
Issue: 5
Pages: 2505 - 2558

Score contribution per author:

8.043 = (α=2.01 / 1 authors) × 4.0x S-tier

α: calibrated so average coauthorship-adjusted count equals average raw count

Abstract

This paper uses US local areas as a laboratory to test for long-term impacts of the Great Recession. In administrative longitudinal data, I estimate that exposure to a 1 percentage point larger 2007–9 local unemployment shock reduced 2015 working-age employment rates by over 0.3 percentage points. Rescaled, this long-term recession impact accounts for over half of the 2007–15 US age-adjusted employment decline. Impacts were larger among older and lower-earning individuals and typically involved a layoff but are present even in a mass-layoffs sample. Disability insurance and out-migration yielded little income replacement. These findings reveal that the Great Recession imposed employment and income losses even after unemployment rates signaled recovery.

Technical Details

RePEc Handle
repec:ucp:jpolec:doi:10.1086/701809
Journal Field
General
Author Count
1
Added to Database
2026-01-29