본문

서브메뉴

Labor Supply and Life-Cycle Risk.
コンテンツ情報
Labor Supply and Life-Cycle Risk.
자료유형  
 학위논문
Control Number  
0017160518
International Standard Book Number  
9798383553077
Dewey Decimal Classification Number  
320
Main Entry-Personal Name  
Giraldo Paez, William Daniel Felipe.
Publication, Distribution, etc. (Imprint  
[S.l.] : Yale University., 2024
Publication, Distribution, etc. (Imprint  
Ann Arbor : ProQuest Dissertations & Theses, 2024
Physical Description  
413 p.
General Note  
Source: Dissertations Abstracts International, Volume: 86-02, Section: A.
General Note  
Advisor: Altonji, Joseph;O'Dea, Cormac;Abaluck, Jason.
Dissertation Note  
Thesis (Ph.D.)--Yale University, 2024.
Summary, Etc.  
요약Technological and social changes in recent decades have affected the economic risks people face over their lives and their ability to work to earn money and insure against such risks. This dissertation examines two such shifts: the increasing age-friendliness of work and women's increasing attachment to the labor force.The first chapter examines the labor force participation of older Americans, which has been increasing since the 1990s. I measure the contribution of the changing nature of American work to the increase in older labor force participation, its impacts on the distribution of welfare at older ages, and implications for Social Security policy. Using the relationship in the Health and Retirement Study between occupation in one's early 50s and later labor force participation, I find that 10-16% of the increase from 1990 to 2010 in the labor force participation of 60-to-69-year-old men can be explained by changes in occupation characteristics, while this amount is 5.8-9% for women. Exploiting differential changes in occupation characteristics across commuting zones and using the commuting zone's predicted routineness in 1950 as an instrument, I confirm there is a causal relationship between occupation characteristics and old-age labor force participation. Estimating a structural model of male old-age labor supply with occupation difference, I find that men face a higher disutility of work from more physical occupations. As a result, in my model, raising the retirement age is especially harmful for low-income workers because it induces those in the most physical jobs to continue working.The second chapter, which is joint work with Altonji, Hysnjo, and Vidangos, studies Americans' family income. We estimate a dynamic model of the family income that individuals in the baby boom cohort experienced over their adult lives. We use the model to measure the dynamic responses of marital status, earnings, and family income to various labor market shocks, education, and permanent wage heterogeneity. We also provide gender-specific estimates of the contribution of education, permanent wages, labor market shocks, spouse characteristics, spouse wage shocks, and marital histories to the variance of family income by age and over a lifetime. For both the dynamic responses and the variance decompositions, we isolate the importance of effects on marriage probabilities and spouse characteristics (sorting). Marital status has a much larger effect on family income for women than men, while labor market shocks are more important for men than for women. Marital sorting plays a major role in the return to education and permanent wages, especially for women. Marital sorting on education and the wage components substantially increases the family income variance, especially for women. Random variation in marital histories accounts for 25.9% of the variance in lifetime family income for women and 7.5% for men.The third chapter, which is also joint work with Altonji, Hysnjo, and Vidangos, builds on the second chapter by studying how the dynamics and sources of variation for family income have changed across cohorts. To do so, we augment the model from the second chapter to allow for differences across cohorts and use more data and cohorts to estimate it. We find that gender asymmetries are substantially smaller for more recent cohorts. The decline reflects the increase in the labor supply of married women as well as other changes. We also find that own characteristics have become increasingly important in the determination of lifetime family income for women, while variation in spouse characteristics has become less important. The opposite is true for men. Gender differences in the sources of inequality in lifetime family income have narrowed.
Subject Added Entry-Topical Term  
Public policy.
Subject Added Entry-Topical Term  
Individual & family studies.
Index Term-Uncontrolled  
Economics of gender
Index Term-Uncontrolled  
Economics of the elderly
Index Term-Uncontrolled  
Family income
Index Term-Uncontrolled  
Labor force and employment
Index Term-Uncontrolled  
Retirement
Added Entry-Corporate Name  
Yale University Economics
Host Item Entry  
Dissertations Abstracts International. 86-02A.
Electronic Location and Access  
로그인을 한후 보실 수 있는 자료입니다.
Control Number  
joongbu:653722
New Books MORE
최근 3년간 통계입니다.

詳細情報

  • 予約
  • 캠퍼스간 도서대출
  • 서가에 없는 책 신고
  • 私のフォルダ
資料
登録番号 請求記号 場所 ステータス 情報を貸す
TQ0030094 T   원문자료 열람가능/출력가능 열람가능/출력가능
마이폴더 부재도서신고

*ご予約は、借入帳でご利用いただけます。予約をするには、予約ボタンをクリックしてください

해당 도서를 다른 이용자가 함께 대출한 도서

Related books

Related Popular Books

도서위치