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Job Security As An Endogenous Job Characteristic

Jahn, Elke J.; & Wagner, Thomas. (2008). Job Security As An Endogenous Job Characteristic.

Jahn, Elke J.; & Wagner, Thomas. (2008). Job Security As An Endogenous Job Characteristic.

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This paper develops a hedonic model of job security (JS). Workers with heterogeneous JS-preferences pay the hedonic price for JS to employers, who incur labor-hoarding costs from supplying JS. In contrast to the Wage-Bill Argument, equilibrium unemployment is strictly positive, as workers with weak JS-preferences trade JS for higher wages. The relation between optimal job insecurity and the perceived dismissal probability is hump-shaped. If firms observe demand, but workers do not, separation is not contractible and firms dismiss workers at-will. Although the workers are risk-averse, they respond to the one-sided private information by trading wage-risk for a higher JS. With two-sided private information, even JS-neutral workers pay the price for a JS guarantee, if their risk premium associated with the wage-replacement risk is larger than the social net loss from production.




JOUR



Jahn, Elke J.
Wagner, Thomas



2008











9788778823199




1461