2021
DOI: 10.1108/jfep-07-2020-0160
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Displacement and debt – the role of debt in returning to work after displacement

Abstract: Purpose This paper aims to analyze the question of how household indebtedness impacts households’ incentives to search for and accept work after displacement. Design/methodology/approach To analyze the relationship between household indebtedness and unemployment duration, this paper applies standard proportional hazard models. For data, this paper relies on the longitudinal US National Survey of Income and Program Participation (SIPP), covering the period between 2008 and 2012. Findings The findings show t… Show more

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Cited by 3 publications
(2 citation statements)
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“…While prior work seeking to distinguish between these theories has reached inconclusive results by testing for asymmetry in the low-frequency response to increases and decreases in income, our strategy instead examines the magnitude of the spending drop in the exact month of a sharp predictable income decline. 3 The spending of the unemployed, particularly around the predictable decline in income at UI benefit exhaustion, is a useful laboratory to study consumption models for two reasons. First, unemployment, just like the receipt of tax rebates, is ubiquitous; over 90 percent of baby boomers in the National Longitudinal Survey of Youth have experienced unemployment.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…While prior work seeking to distinguish between these theories has reached inconclusive results by testing for asymmetry in the low-frequency response to increases and decreases in income, our strategy instead examines the magnitude of the spending drop in the exact month of a sharp predictable income decline. 3 The spending of the unemployed, particularly around the predictable decline in income at UI benefit exhaustion, is a useful laboratory to study consumption models for two reasons. First, unemployment, just like the receipt of tax rebates, is ubiquitous; over 90 percent of baby boomers in the National Longitudinal Survey of Youth have experienced unemployment.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Displacement was most likely to occur for those aged 45–64 years (11.0%), with this effect more pronounced for men (11.5%) and less so for women (8.7%). These findings are notable to the extent that re-employment and re-training for this age cohort might prove to be more challenging (Bednarzik et al, 2021). When looking at the sectoral composition of displacement, the effect was most pronounced in the services sector.…”
Section: The Determinants Of Labour Market Outcomes During the Pandemicmentioning
confidence: 99%