Does the growth process discriminate against older workers?

Article dans une revue: This paper seeks to gain insights on the relationship between growth and employment when considering heterogeneous agents in terms of their working horizon. Using an OECD database, our empirical estimations suggest that growth positively influences the employment rate of workers having a long working horizon (young workers) while negatively influences the employment rate of workers having a short working horizon (senior workers). We then provide theoretical foundations to this result by means of an endogenous job destruction framework a laMortensen and Pissarides (1998) where we introduce life cycle features. We show that, under the assumption of homogeneous productivity among workers, growth negatively affects the employment rate of workers having a short working horizon before retirement (senior workers) while it positively affects the employment rate of workers having a long working horizon (young workers). Numerical simulations confirm these results, however a non standard calibration is required to reproduce the elasticity values obtained in our empirical estimations.

Auteur(s)

Eva Moreno Galbis, F. Langot

Revue
  • Journal of Macroeconomics
Date de publication
  • 2013
Mots-clés
  • TFP growth
  • Working horizon
  • Old workers’ employment rate
  • Capitalization
  • Creative destruction effect
Pages
  • 286 – 306
Version
  • 1
Volume
  • 38