Précis
Business
cycles then and now
Job loss and
older men
Wage gaps and
segregation
In his introduction to a Journal of Economic Perspectives symposium on business cycles, J Bradford De Long presented a straightforward comparison of the long expansions of the post-World War II era. Several of the indicators he chose to characterize these long expansions as they reached the 30-quarters mark will be familiar to readers of the Review:
Indicator | 1960s | 1980s | 1990s | |||
Annual percent growth in employment........................ | 2.1 | 2.5 | 1.5 | |||
Annual change in unemployment.................................. | -.3 | -.7 | -.3 | |||
Starting unemployment rate (percent)........................... | 6.3 | 10.7 | 6.6 | |||
Ending unemployment rate (percent)............................ | 3.6 | 5.3 | 4.5 | |||
Underlying trend productivuty growth rate (percent) | 2.9 | .7 | 1.2 |
In her symposium paper, Christina D. Romer suggests an even longer period of historical continuity, both qualitative and quantitative: "Major real macroeconomic indicators have not become dramatically more stable between the pre-World War I and post-World War II eras, and recessions have become only slightly less severe on average." One measureduration of recessionmay actually have gone up by a month from an average of 9.7 months for the nine pre-World War I recessions Romer analyzed to 10.7 months for the nine recessions since the end of World War II. On the other hand, the duration of expansions has increased even more, rising from an average 34 months before the First War to 51.5 months since the Second.
Chan and Stevens found that men in their fifties have a three-quarters chance of re-employment within 2 years of losing a job, while for a 62-year-old, the chance is less than one-third. Moreover, the jobs that older men obtain after displacement can be short-lived. While three-quarters of job losers in their fifties find another job at some point within 2 years, only 61 percent of them are actually employed at the end of the 2 years, based on Chan and Stevens estimates.
The researchers also compared those who had lost a job between 1984 and 1996 and those who had not. They found that for 55-year-olds, only half were working 1 year after the loss of a job, whereas 95 percent of the nondisplaced men were working.
The gap between the employment-population ratios of men who have been displaced in their fifties and those who have not persists for at least 7 years, say Chan and Stevens. The retirement of non-displaced workers accounts for some of the reduction in the gap over time.
The data examined by the authors is their New Worker-Establishment Characteristics Database (NWECD), constructed with matched data from the 1990 Decennial Census and the 1990 Standard Statistical Establishment List. After restrictions for workers hours and the size of establishment, the sample for this study of segregation consisted of 637,718 workers in 32,931 establishments out of the full NWECD sample of 1,056,653 workers matched to 153,291 establishments.
Bayard, Hellerstein, Neumark, and Troske analyzed segregation along four dimensions: occupation, industry, establishment, and job cell (occupation within an employer). They found that a higher degree of segregation between Hispanic men and white men than between Hispanic women and white women accounts for most of the larger Hispanic-white wage differential for men. They also estimated that segregation contributed to about one-third to one-half of the larger black-white wage differential for men.
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