Business Volatility, Job Destruction, and Unemployment

Papers and StudiesUnemployment inflows fell from 4 percent of employment per month in the early 1980s to 2 percent or less by the mid 1990s and thereafter. U.S. data also show a secular decline in the job destruction rate and the volatility of firm-level employment growth rates. We interpret this decline as a decrease in the intensity of idiosyncratic labor demand shocks, a key parameter in search and matching models of unemployment. According to these models, a lower intensity of idiosyncratic shocks produces less job destruction, fewer workers flowing through the unemployment pool and less frictional unemployment. To evaluate the importance of this theoretical mechanism, we relate industry-level unemployment flows from 1977 to 2005 to industry-level indicators for the intensity of idiosyncratic shocks. Unlike previous research, we focus on the lower frequency relationship of job destruction and business volatility to unemployment flows. We find strong evidence that declines in the intensity of idiosyncratic labor demand shocks drove big declines in the incidence and rate of unemployment. This evidence implies that the unemployment rate has become much less sensitive to cyclical movements in the job-finding rate. . . .

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Steven J. Davis is a visiting scholar at AEI. R. Jason Faberman is an economist at the Federal Reserve Bank of Philadelphia. John Haltiwanger is a professor of economics at the University of Maryland. Ron Jarmin is the chief economist at the U.S. Census Bureau. Javier Miranda is a researcher at the U.S. Census Bureau.

About the Author

 

Steven J.
Davis
  • Steven J. Davis studies the effect of taxes on work activity, the creation and loss of jobs, the employment impact of wage-setting rules, and other labor market issues. He is a professor of international business and economics at the University of Chicago Graduate School of Business and a research associate at the National Bureau of Economic Research. He previously taught at Brown University and MIT and served as a consultant and researcher at the Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago. As a visiting scholar at AEI, Mr. Davis studies how tax differences in states and countries lead to differences in employment, household work, and leisure time.

     
  • Phone: 773-702-7312
    Email: sdavis@aei.org
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    Name: Chad Hill
    Phone: 202-862-5862
    Email: chad.hill@aei.org
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