2018
DOI: 10.1257/aer.20151720
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How Do Hours Worked Vary with Income? Cross-Country Evidence and Implications

Abstract: This paper builds a new internationally comparable database of hours worked to measure how hours vary with income across and within countries. We document that average hours worked per adult are substantially higher in low-income countries than in high-income countries. The pattern of decreasing hours with aggregate income holds for both men and women, for adults of all ages and education levels, and along both the extensive and intensive margin. Within countries, hours worked per worker are also decreasing in… Show more

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Cited by 149 publications
(84 citation statements)
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References 56 publications
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“…However, one may wonder whether the value of leisure is very high at the margin for rural workers near subsistence consumption levels in the poor countries and households in our sample. Empirically, the substantially higher average work hours in poor countries (Bick, Fuchs-Schündeln, and Lagakos, 2018) suggest that those households may not put much weight on leisure relative to consumption at the margin. If so, the level of consumption in the city may better capture the outcome of interest for a poor rural individual considering migrating to the city rather than consumption per hour worked.…”
Section: Results: Cross-sectional Gaps and Observational Returns To Mmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…However, one may wonder whether the value of leisure is very high at the margin for rural workers near subsistence consumption levels in the poor countries and households in our sample. Empirically, the substantially higher average work hours in poor countries (Bick, Fuchs-Schündeln, and Lagakos, 2018) suggest that those households may not put much weight on leisure relative to consumption at the margin. If so, the level of consumption in the city may better capture the outcome of interest for a poor rural individual considering migrating to the city rather than consumption per hour worked.…”
Section: Results: Cross-sectional Gaps and Observational Returns To Mmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The job-finding rates ( Figure C1b) are quite low, though the rationale for this result is difficult to come by. Feng et al (2018) and Bick et al (2018) highlight how including such countries may change the overall shape of cross-sectional labor market patterns. Given the extra cost in collecting (even short) panel data, however, labor force surveys are unfortunately unavailable in such countries.…”
Section: Inclusion Of Other Datamentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The search and matching literature offers a number of theories with candidate frictions, but we lack systematic empirical evidence to evaluate which is the most promising. While recent work has developed estimates of important crosssectional objects such as hours worked or the unemployment rate, the main limitation is that little is known about labor market dynamics in poor countries (Bick et al, 2018;Feng et al, 2018).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Their conclusions are as follows: in the countries with low-income, the average number of worked hours is much higher than for high-income countries. Also, they stress that differences in prosperity are much greater than the GDP per capita indicates [2].…”
Section: Selected Coefficients Characterising the Labour Market In Thmentioning
confidence: 99%