Job Creation in the United States: Good Jobs Or Bad?Despite a record of sustained growth in employment in the United States, there is long-standing concern that the new jobs are of poor quality, implying that the quality of the stock of jobs in the economy is deteriorating. In fact, it is difficult to define a new job, much less identify such jobs and evaluate their quality. In this study, I define new jobs operationally as worker-firm matches that have begun within the last year (i.e., tenure less than one year), and I investigate the extent to which the quality of new (low tenure) jobs relative to old (higher tenure) jobs has changed over the period from 1979-1996. I consider three dimensions of quality: real wages, the rate of part-time employment, and the rate of coverage by employer-provided health insurance. The empirical analysis relies on data from eight mobility and benefit supplements to the Current Population Survey over the period studied. The results are clear-cut. Real hourly wages on new jobs have deteriorated slightly relative to wages on older jobs, but the general patterns of the wage distribution on new jobs have changed in ways similar to the overall wage distribution (a large increase in the return to education driven by a large decline in wages for less-skilled workers). There is no evidence of an increase in the rate of part-time employment on either new jobs or old jobs so that the quality of new jobs has not changed absolutely or relative to the quality of older jobs in this dimension. The quality of new jobs has deteriorated substantially for some workers in the provision of employer-provided health insurance. Less-educated workers have become substantially less likely to be covered by or offered health insurance by their employer, and the decline is particularly large on new jobs. There has been a smaller decline in employer-provided health insurance coverage for more-educated workers on both old and new jobs, but the decline is no larger on new jobs than on old jobs. On balance, there has been a decline in the quality of jobs for less-skilled workers, as measured by the availability of a key fringe benefit, that is especially severe for new jobs and that reinforces the well known deterioration of the labor market for less-skilled workers more generally. There has been relatively little change in the quality of jobs available to more highly skilled workers, either on new or on old jobs. |
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Page 26
... substantially with demographic characteristics , the fact that the adjusted differences in part - time rates between new jobs and old jobs are not much different from the unadjusted differences suggests that worker characteristics do ...
... substantially with demographic characteristics , the fact that the adjusted differences in part - time rates between new jobs and old jobs are not much different from the unadjusted differences suggests that worker characteristics do ...
Page 32
... substantially higher on old jobs than on new jobs . On average , 89.0 percent of workers on old jobs and only 74.9 percent of workers on new jobs take - up health insurance when it is offered . As with the coverage and offer rates , the ...
... substantially higher on old jobs than on new jobs . On average , 89.0 percent of workers on old jobs and only 74.9 percent of workers on new jobs take - up health insurance when it is offered . As with the coverage and offer rates , the ...
Page 40
... substantially since 1979 on both old and new jobs . There is no evidence that the differential in wage rates between old jobs and new jobs has changed systematically over time . The idea that the large number of new jobs produced by the ...
... substantially since 1979 on both old and new jobs . There is no evidence that the differential in wage rates between old jobs and new jobs has changed systematically over time . The idea that the large number of new jobs produced by the ...
Common terms and phrases
1988 and April Above-Median analysis Average Average base category benefit supplements coefficients columns of table contained in column controls for age covered by employer-provided CPS final sampling current employer Current Population Survey cyclical differential in coverage education category education variables employer-provided health insurance employment growth Farber final sampling weights fringe benefits health insurance coverage high-wage sectors includes survey dummy increased indicator variable insurance coverage rate interaction of sex job creation job quality jobs relative least 16 less-educated workers linear probability models log points marital status mobility supplements new-job discount new-job dummy variable new-job rates new-old differential NLSY numbers in parentheses offered employer-provided health offered health insurance ordinary least squares parentheses are standard part-time employment part-time rates percentage point decline period R-Squared rate on old real wages regression adjustment relative to old rotation groups sample includes survey sex and marital standard errors substantially survey dummy variables workers on old workers with 12