Volume 35, Number 3 (Summer) 2000

Manski, Charles F. and John D. Straub. 2000. "Worker Perceptions of Job Insecurity in the Mid-1990s: Evidence from the Survey of Economic Expectations." Journal of Human Resources 35(3):447-479.

This paper analyzes the probabilistic measures of job insecurity that have recently become available through the nationwide Survey of Economic Expectations (SEE). Since 1994, employed SEE respondents have been asked questions eliciting their subjective probabilities of job loss in the coming year and their expectations of a good outcome should they lose their current job and have to engage in job search. The responses of 3,561 persons interviewed from 1994 through early 1998 are analyzed here.

    It is found that workers vary considerably in their perceptions of job insecurity, with most workers perceiving little or no risk but some perceiving moderate to high risk. Expectations of job loss tend to decrease markedly with age, but so do expectations of a good outcome should job search become necessary. The net result is that job insecurity tends not to vary at all with age. Subjective probabilities of a job loss tend to decrease with schooling and subjective probabilities of good search outcomes tend to increase with schooling; hence composite job job insecurity tends to decrease with schooling. Perceptions of job insecurity vary little by sex. Perceptions of job insecurity vary substantially by race, the main differences being that subjective probabilities of job loss among blacks tend to be nearly double those of whites. Self-employed workers see themselves as facing less job insecurity than do those who work for others. Workers perceptions of job insecurity peaked in 1995. Expectations within groups are heterogeneous, the covariates (age, schooling, sex, race, employer, year) collectively explaining only a small part of the sample variation in worker expectations.

    Moving beyond descriptive analysis, the paper connects the empirical findings to modern theories of the labor market. A competing-formalization of job separations by the two routes of job loss and voluntary quits is used to draw conclusions about workers' expectations of exogenous job destruction in the year ahead. The theory of job search is used to interpret the empirical finding that the distribution of search-outcome expectations is symmetric and quite dispersed.

Charles F. Manski is a Professor of Economics and Fellow of the Institute for Policy Research at Northwestern University. John D. Straub is a Ph.D. candidate in economics at the University of Wisconsin-Madison. This research was supported by grant SBR-9722846 from the National Science Foundation and by Grant 2P01 AG10179-04A1 from the National Institute on Aging. The authors are grateful to the University of Wisconsin Survey Center for enabling collection of the data. They have benefited from the opportunity to present this research in seminars at Northwestern University and the University of Wisconsin-Madison. The data analyzed in this article have been archived by the Data and Program Library Service of the University of Wisconsin-Madison, and can be obtained on the web at http://dpls.dacc.wisc.edu/econexpect/index.html .


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