%0 Report %A Mahajan, Parag %A Patki, Dhiren %A Stüber, Heiko %T Bad Times, Bad Jobs? How Recessions Affect Early Career Trajectories %D 2024 %8 2024 Apr %I Institute of Labor Economics (IZA) %C Bonn %7 IZA Discussion Paper %N 16898 %U https://www.iza.org/publications/dp16898 %X Workers who enter the labor market during recessions experience lasting earnings losses, but the role of non-pay amenities in exacerbating or counteracting these losses remains unknown. Using population-scale data from Germany, we find that labor market entry during recessions generates a 5 percent reduction in earnings cumulated over the first decade of experience. Implementing a revealed-preference estimator of employer quality that aggregates information from the universe of worker moves across employers, we find that 17 percent of recession-induced earnings losses are compensated by non-pay amenities. Purely pecuniary estimates can therefore overstate the welfare costs of labor market entry during recessions. %K earnings inequality %K recessions %K non-pay amenities