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Contribution Details

Type Working Paper
Scope Discipline-based scholarship
Title Duration dependence in finding a job: applications, interviews, and job offers
Organization Unit
Authors
  • Jeremy Zuchuat
  • Rafael Lalive
  • Aderonke Osikominu
  • Lorenzo Pesaresi
  • Josef Zweimüller
Language
  • English
Institution Centre for Economic Policy Research
Series Name CEPR Discussion Papers
Number 18600
ISSN 0265-8003
Number of Pages 94
Date 2023
Abstract Text The job finding rate declines with the duration of unemployment. While this is a well established fact, the reasons are still disputed. We use monthly search diaries from Swiss public employment offices to shed new light on this issue. Search diaries record all applications sent by job seekers, including the outcome of each application – whether the employer followed up with a job interview and a job offer. Based on more than 600,000 applications sent by 15,000 job seekers, we find that job applications and job interviews decrease, but job offers (after an interview) increase with duration. A model with statistical discrimination by firms and learning from search outcomes by workers replicates these empirical duration patterns closely. The structurally estimated model predicts that 55 percent of the decline in the job finding rate is due to “true” duration dependence, while the remaining 45 percent is due to dynamic selection of the unemployment pool. We also discuss further drivers of the observed duration patterns, such as human capital depreciation, stock-flow matching, depletion of one’s personal network, and changes in application targeting or quality.
Official URL https://cepr.org/publications/dp18600
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Other Identification Number merlin-id:24382
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Keywords Job search
Additional Information Auch publiziert als IZA Discussion Paper No. 16602.