Wealth, Portfolios, and Nonemployment Duration

We use administrative data on individual balance sheets in Denmark to document how an individual's financial position affects job search behavior. We look at the effect of wealth at the entry into unemployment on the exit rate from unemployment as well as the effect on the subsequent match qual...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of money, credit and banking credit and banking, 2024-10, Vol.56 (7), p.1861-1886
Hauptverfasser: FONTAINE, FRANÇOIS, JENSEN, JANNE NYBORG, VEJLIN, RUNE
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:We use administrative data on individual balance sheets in Denmark to document how an individual's financial position affects job search behavior. We look at the effect of wealth at the entry into unemployment on the exit rate from unemployment as well as the effect on the subsequent match quality. The detailed data allow us not only to distinguish between liquid and illiquid parts, but also to decompose each of them into assets and liabilities. The decomposition of wealth into these four components is key to understanding how wealth affects job finding rates. In particular, we show that liquid assets reduce the probability of becoming reemployed, but we do not see an effect of liquid liabilities or the illiquid wealth components, while interest payments speed up reemployment. The results on subsequent match quality in form of job duration and wages are mixed.
ISSN:0022-2879
1538-4616
DOI:10.1111/jmcb.13058