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Weathering the Great Recession: Variation in Employment Responses, by Establishments and Countries
Author(s) -
Erling Barth,
James C. Davis,
Richard B. Freeman,
Sari Pekkala Kerr
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
rsf the russell sage foundation journal of the social sciences
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.979
H-Index - 17
eISSN - 2377-8261
pISSN - 2377-8253
DOI - 10.7758/rsf.2017.3.3.03
Subject(s) - great recession , variation (astronomy) , weathering , recession , demographic economics , economics , geography , labour economics , geology , geochemistry , keynesian economics , physics , astrophysics
This paper finds that U.S. employment changed differently relative to output in the Great Recession and recovery than in most other advanced countries or in the United States in earlier recessions. Instead of hoarding labor, U.S. firms reduced employment proportionately more than output in the Great Recession, with establishments that survived the downturn contracting jobs massively. Diverging from the aggregate pattern, U.S. manufacturers reduced employment less than output while the elasticity of employment to gross output varied widely among establishments. In the recovery, growth of employment was dominated by job creation in new establishments. The variegated responses of employment to output challenges extant models of how enterprises adjust employment over the business cycle

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