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Layoffs and Lemons

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1991

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University of Chicago Press
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Gibbons, Robert, and Lawrence F. Katz. 1991. Layoffs and lemons. Journal of Labor Economics 9(4): 351-380.

Abstract

We provide theoretical and empirical analyses of an asymmetric-information model of layoffs. When firms have discretion with respect to whom to lay off, the market infers that laid-off workers are of low ability. Assuming that no such negative inference is warranted if workers are displaced in a plant closing, postdisplacement wages should be lower and postdisplacement unemployment spells should be longer for those displaced by layoffs than for those displaced by plant closings, but predisplacement wages should not differ by cause of displacement. Evidence on displaced workers from Current Population Surveys supports all three of our model's predictions.

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Layoffs and Lemons… : DASH Story 2015-11-16
I'm using this to show my Northern Virginia Community College students -- who are struggling to learn social skills in the workplace -- how they need to make a good impression to get their next job. Firing is legally controversial, but workers who just rub others the wrong way can get laid off -- and it may not be a career killer but it will complicate their job search. Thank you so much for sharing this material openly, and keep up the good work!