Andreas Mueller, Austin University
"Job Search Behavior Among the Employed and Non‐Employed"
Abstract
We develop a unique survey that focuses on the job search behavior of individuals regard- less of their labor force status and field it annually starting in 2013. We use our survey to study the relationship between search effort and outcomes for the employed and non-employed. Three important facts stand out: (1) on-the-job search is pervasive, and is more intense at the lower rungs of the job ladder; (2) the employed are about four times more efficient than the unemployed in job search; and (3) the employed receive better job offers than the unemployed. We set up an on-the-job search model with endogenous search effort, calibrate it to fit our new facts, and find that the search effort of the employed is highly elastic. We show that search effort substantially amplifies labor market responses to job separation and matching efficiency shocks over the business cycle.
(Joint with J Faberman, A Sahin and G Topa, R&R Econometrica)
Contact person: Daphne Skandalis