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IZA Discussion Paper No. 12851
December 2019
Occupational Routine-Intensity and the Costs of Job Loss: Evidence from Mass Layoffs

published in: Labour Economics, 2021, 68, 101953

This paper analyses how differences in the degree of occupational routine-intensity affect the costs of job loss. We use worker-level data on mass layoffs in Germany between 1980 and 2010 and provide causal evidence that workers who used to be employed in more routine-intensive occupations suffer larger and more persistent earnings losses after the mass layoff. Furthermore, we are able to show that, at least initially, earnings losses are primarily due to a reduction in the number of days in employment, suggesting that routine-intensive workers face considerable frictions in the adjustment to job loss. Conditional on finding a new job, routine-intensive workers are more likely to change their occupations but end up systematically in the lower end of their new occupation's wage distribution.

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Mark Fallak
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Olga Nottmeyer
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+352 585-855-501
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