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Does the welfare state make older workers unemployable?. Gilles Saint-Paul TSE. Why is the labor market for the elderly different?. Small remaining career time Falling productivity High rent component of total wage.
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Does the welfare state make older workers unemployable? Gilles Saint-Paul TSE
Why is the labor market for the elderly different? Small remaining career time Falling productivity High rent component of total wage
Figure 1: the evolution of skills over the life cyle; source: Avolio and Waldman (1994)
Consequences Large losses of older workers who lose their jobs Greater likelihood of working in secondary sector Unemployment benefits more damaging to employment of older workers Firing costs have a smaller effect on employability (if age-neutral) Hiring costs have a larger effect
Example of age-specific EP The « Delalande » contribution Additional firing cost after 50 In 1993, was liberalized and no longer applied to those hired after 50 Behagel et al. (1998) have studied this experiment
Findings Monthly job finding rate of the 50+ increased by 0.5 % Strong substitution effects: reform made the 50+ more employable than the 50- Delalande tax reduced layoffs Effect on preventive layoffs positive but very small.
The role of hiring costs PDF of net profits lower for older workers Willingness to pay hiring cost lower Hiring costs therefore reduce the relative demand for older workers This is the « endgame » effect: under HC employability falls with distance from retirement
Figure 2: employment of older workers across countries. Source: Hairault et al. (2008)
A simple model People live for T units of time Initial productivity yH With prob. p(s), falls to yL Fixed wage w Hiring cost H Firing cost F(s) F(s) = F0, s < s* F(s) = F1, s > s*
yL s s* Figure 3: the firing frontier
yL s ~ s* s Figure 4: effect of tighter employment protection
The hiring decision Three regimes: A: employability falls with age (endgame effect dominates throughout) B: employability is hump-shaped, due to a falling firing premium C: employability M-shaped, due to a large step in firing costs
The elderly in a flexible and rigid labor market France vs. US Compare the relative outcomes of the elderly in both countries, by education x sex group Outcome variables: Employment rates Unemployment Transitions Wages Wage losses
A. Employment rates The dominant picture is that of a strong endgame effect Employment rates for 55-60 much lower in France than US This squares with the above model
Table 1 – Relative employment rates of older workers by categories
B. Unemployment rates Large increase in UR in the mid-40s in France vs. the US. This may be due to lower demand, due to eg Delalande However, entitlement effect is more likely to operate here
Job finding rate Very strong endgame effect in France compared with US Both entitlement and endgame effects play a role for those workers The unskilled are particularly affected additional role of minimum wage? Midlife discount in unemployment rates due to lower job loss rates and greater flows to non participation for older workers
Job loss rate Older workers fairly protected from job loss in France But very substantial transition to non participation
Wages Wages go up with age in France They are hump-shaped in the US Suggests wage formation in France makes older workers overpaid Exacerbates entitlement effect Creates support for differential employment protection