How Import Competition Affects Displaced Workers in the U.S
In: The B.E. journal of economic analysis & policy, Band 10, Heft 1
Abstract
Abstract
I use the Displaced Worker Survey and bilateral trade data to assess the impact of import competition from low-wage countries on displaced workers' unemployment duration and re-employment wages. While low-wage imports have almost no effect on unemployment duration for workers displaced from an industry with the average length of the quality ladder, I find that a ten percentage point increase in low-wage imports leads to a 5.6 week longer jobless spell duration for workers displaced from an industry with a short quality ladder. Similarly, a ten percentage point increase in low-wage imports leads to a 7.2 percent decline in re-employment wages for workers displaced from an average ladder industry, but it leads to an 11.3 percent decline in re-employment wages for workers displaced from a short ladder industry. I show evidence that greater low-wage imports raise the likelihood of sectoral relocation upon re-employment, leading to loss of sector specific human capital.
Zitationen
Wir haben bei OpenAlex eine Zitation für Sie gefunden.
Wir haben bei OpenAlex Zitationen für Sie gefunden.
Referenzen
Wir haben bei OpenAlex eine Referenz für Sie gefunden.
Wir haben bei OpenAlex Referenzen für Sie gefunden.
Problem melden