Ir al menú de navegación principal Ir al contenido principal Ir al pie de página del sitio

SECCIÓN C: INGENIERÍAS

Vol. 14 Núm. 1 (2022)

Efectos del desplazamiento laboral sobre la movilidad intertemporal de los ingresos

DOI
https://doi.org/10.18272/aci.v14i1.2294
Enviado
mayo 15, 2021
Publicado
2022-04-11

Resumen

En este trabajo, yo estudio cómo una separación laboral involuntaria afecta a la movilidad intertemporal en la distribución de ingresos laborales de los trabajadores. Con ese fin, uso datos de Panel Study Income Dynamics (PSID) de los años 1973-2017 para construir matrices de probabilidad de transiciones y para obtener estimadores a través de una regresión logística ordenada. Encontré que estar desplazado laboralmente aumenta la probabilidad de que el trabajador este en deciles de ingreso inferiores en contraste a los resultados de un trabajador que nunca ha experimentado desplazamiento. La reducción de horas trabajadas, largos períodos de desempleo y la destrucción de capital humano específico deprecian el valor de mercado de un trabajador desplazado, así se generan pérdidas de ingreso significativas.

viewed = 344 times

Citas

  1. Bruce C Fallick. A review of the recent empirical literature on displaced workers. ILR Review, 50(1):5-16, 1996.
  2. Lori G. Kletzer. Job displacement. Journal of Economic Perspectives, 12(1):115-136, March 1998.
  3. Louis S Jacobson, Robert J LaLonde, and Daniel G Sullivan. Earnings losses of displaced workers. The American economic review, pages 685-709, 1993.
  4. Christopher J Ruhm. Are workers permanently scarred by job displacements? The American economic review, 81(1):319-324, 1991.
  5. Ann Huff Stevens. Persistent effects of job displacement: The importance of multiple job losses. Journal of Labor Economics, 15(1, Part 1):165-188, 1997.
  6. Nicholas Jolly. Job displacement and the inter-temporal movement of workers through the earnings and income distributions. Contemporary Economic Policy, 31(2):392-406, 2013.
  7. Steve Berry, Peter Gottschalk, and Doug Wissoker. An error components model of the impact of plant closing on earnings. The Review of Economics and Statistics, pages 701- 707, 1988.
  8. Maury Gittleman and Mary Joyce. Have family income mobility patterns changed? Demography, 36(3):299-314, 1999.
  9. Kenneth A. Couch and Dana W. Placzek. Earnings losses of displaced workers revisited. American Economic Review, 100(1):572-89, March 2010.
  10. M Lachowska, A Mas, and SA Woodbury. Sources of displaced workers' long-term earnings losses (working paper no. 24217). National Bureau of Economic Research,10:w24217, 2018.
  11. Robert Gibbons and Lawrence F Katz. Layoffs and lemons. Journal of labor Economics, 9(4):351-380, 1991.
  12. John T Addison and Pedro Portugal. Job displacement, relative wage changes, and duration of unemployment. Journal of Labor economics, 7(3):281-302, 1989.
  13. David S Kaplan, Gabriel Martinez Gonzalez, Raymond Robertson, Naercio Menezes-Filho, and Omar Arias. What happens to wages after displacement?[with comments]. Economia, 5(2):197-242, 2005.
  14. Daniel Fackler, Steffen Muller, and Jens Stegmaier. Explaining wage losses after job dis-¨ placement: Employer size and lost firm rents. Technical report, IWH Discussion Papers, 2017.
  15. Ben Kriechel and Gerard A Pfann. Heterogeneity among displaced workers. ROA Maas-tricht, 2003.
  16. Russell Ormiston. Worker displacement and occupation-specific human capital. Work and Occupations, 41(3):350-384, 2014.
  17. Thomas A DiPrete. Life course risks, mobility regimes, and mobility consequences: A comparison of sweden, germany, and the united states. American journal of Sociology, 108(2):267-309, 2002.
  18. George A Akerlof. The market for "lemons": Quality uncertainty and the market mechanism. In Uncertainty in economics, pages 235-251. Elsevier, 1978.
  19. Jacob Mincer. Investment in human capital and personal income distribution. Journal of political economy, 66(4):281-302, 1958.