Affiliation:
1. Arizona State University , United States
2. Virginia Commonwealth University , United States
3. Princeton University , United States
Abstract
Abstract
We document two robust features of the cross-sectional distribution of usual weekly hours and hourly wages. First, usual weekly hours are heavily concentrated around 40 hours, while at the same time a substantial share of total hours come from individuals who work more than 50 hours. Second, mean hourly wages are nonmonotonic across the usual hours distribution, with a peak at 50 hours. We develop and estimate a model of labor supply to account for these features. The novel feature of our model is that earnings are nonlinear in hours, with the extent of nonlinearity varying over the hours distribution. Our estimates imply significant wage penalties for people who deviate from 40 hours in either direction, leading to a large mass of people who work 40 hours and are not very responsive to shocks. This has important implications for the role of labor supply as a mechanism for self-insurance in a standard heterogeneous-agent incomplete-markets model and for empirical strategies designed to estimate labor supply parameters.
Funder
Alexander von Humboldt Foundation
Publisher
Oxford University Press (OUP)
Subject
Economics and Econometrics
Reference58 articles.
1. The Effect of Part Time Work on Wages: Evidence from Social Security Rules;Aaronson;Journal of Labor Economics,2004
2. On the Covariance Structure of Earnings and Hours Changes;Abowd;Econometrica,1989
3. Intertemporal Substitution in Labor Supply: Evidence from Micro Data;Altonji;Journal of Political Economy,1986
4. Labor Supply Preferences, Hours Constraints, and Hours-Wage Trade-offs;Altonji;Journal of Labor Economics,1988
5. Older Americans Would Work Longer If Jobs Were Flexible;Ameriks;American Economic Journal: Macroeconomics,2020
Cited by
19 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献