Université de Zürich - Faculté des sciences économiques

Culture, work attitudes, and job search: evidence from the Swiss language border

Description: 

Unemployment varies across space and in time. Can attitudes toward work explain some of these differences? We study job search durations along the Swiss language border, sharply separating Romance language speakers from German speakers. According to surveys and voting results, the language border separates two social groups with different cultural background and attitudes toward work. Despite similar local labor markets and identical institutions, Romance language speakers search for work almost seven weeks (or 22%) longer than their German speaking neighbors. This is a quantitatively large effect, comparable to a large change in unemployment insurance generosity.

Essays on the effcient use of public resources

Four empirical studies on games of investment and cooperation

Herding behavior, forecasts and reactivity

A provincial view of China’s external imbalances

Was die Universität Berkeley lehrt: Europa verdammt die öffentlichen Universitäten zumeist in die Regionalliga

Description: 

Die vom US-Bundesstaat Kalifornien betriebene Spitzenschule macht vor, wie sich akademische Exzellenz mit vergleichsweise geringen Mitteln erreichen lässt – doch es gibt Grenzen der Effizienz.

Industrie ist mehr als nur Fabriken

Description: 

Die Aufmerksamkeit, die vor allem amerikanische Politiker auf den Industriesektor richten, hat Gründe: Wenn Betriebe
dichtmachen, können Regionen sozial zerfallen. Einfache Lösungen gibt es nicht.

Über Roger Federers Millionen regt sich niemand auf

Description: 

Laut Ernst Fehr können Millionen-Saläre gerechtfertigt sein - aber viele Firmen berechnen Manager-Vergütungen falsch.

Lohn orientiert sich oft nicht an Leistung

Short- and long-term effects of unemployment on fertility

Description: 

Scholars have been examining the relationship between fertility and unemployment for more than a century. Most studies find that fertility falls with unemployment in the short run, but it is not known whether these negative effects persist, because women simply may postpone childbearing to better economic times. Using more than 140 million US birth records for the period 1975–2010, we analyze both the short- and long-run effects of unemployment on fertility. We follow fixed cohorts of US-born women defined by their own state and year of birth, and relate their fertility to the
unemployment rate experienced by each cohort at different ages. We focus on conceptions that result in a live birth. We find that women in their early 20s are most affected by high unemployment rates in the short run and that the negative effects on fertility grow over time. A one percentage point increase in the average unemployment rate experienced between the ages of 20 and 24 reduces the short-run fertility of women in this age range by six conceptions per 1,000 women. When we follow these women to age 40, we find that a one percentage point increase in the unemployment rate experienced at ages 20–24 leads to an overall loss of 14.2 conceptions. This long-run effect is driven largely by women who remain childless and thus do not have either first births or higher-order births.

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