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Unemployment: Blame the Victim?

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Author Info
Jonathan Gershuny () (Institute for Social and Economic Research, University of Essex, UK)
Carmel Hannan () (The Economics & Social Research Institute, Dublin, Ireland)
Abstract

This paper investigates a problem of 'state dependency'. People who have been unemployed in the past are much more likely than others to become unemployed in the future. But is it unemployment itself that causes future unemployment or is there something else, some measured or unmeasured form of heterogeneity, in individual characteristics or environmental circumstances, that causes both the past and present unemployment? There is an extensive economic literature on this issue which comes to no absolutely firm conclusions as to the existence of state dependency in this case. We present a simple sociological model, of the 'recursive determination' of the employment state. We estimate that time invariant personal characteristics not included in the model (or left altogether unmeasured) can only play a small part in the determination of unemployment. Which implies in turn that the association between successive periods of unemployment must be mostly the result of acquired or other time-varying characteristics (though we cannot tell whether these relate to the individual or to circumstances in his or her social or geographical environment).

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Publisher Info
Paper provided by Institute for Labour Research in its series ILR working papers with number 031.

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Length: 30
Date of creation: May 1999
Date of revision:
Handle: RePEc:esl:ilrdps:031

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Postal: Institute for Labour Research University of Essex, Wivenhoe Park Colchester, Essex CO4 3SQ UK
Phone: 44-1206-872957
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Web page: http://www.essex.ac.uk/ilr

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Postal: Institute for Labour Research University of Essex, Wivenhoe Park Colchester, Essex CO4 3SQ UK
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Web: http://www.essex.ac.uk/ilr/discuss/index.htm

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Related research
Keywords: State dependence; unobserved heterogeneity; habit;

Find related papers by JEL classification:
J00 - Labor and Demographic Economics - - General - - - General
J60 - Labor and Demographic Economics - - Mobility, Unemployment, and Vacancies - - - General

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This page was last updated on 2009-12-21.


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