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Research ArticleArticles

The Lost Generation?

Labor Market Outcomes for Post-Great Recession Entrants

View ORCID ProfileJesse Rothstein
Journal of Human Resources, September 2023, 58 (5) 1452-1479; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3368/jhr.58.5.0920-11206R1
Jesse Rothstein
Jesse Rothstein is Carmel P. Friesen Professor of Public Policy and Professor of Economics at the University of California, Berkeley ().
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ABSTRACT

I study cohort patterns in the labor market outcomes of recent college graduates, examining changes surrounding the Great Recession. Recession entrants have lower wages and employment than those of earlier cohorts; more recent cohorts’ employment is even lower, but the newest entrants’ wages have risen. I relate these changes to “scarring” effects of initial conditions. I demonstrate that adverse early conditions permanently reduce new entrants’ employment probabilities. I also replicate earlier results of medium-term scarring effects on wages that fade out by the early 30s. But scarring cannot account for the employment collapse for recent cohorts. There was a dramatic negative structural break in college graduates’ employment rates, beginning around the 2005 entry cohort, that shows no sign of abating.

JEL Classification:
  • E24
  • J2
  • Received September 2020.
  • Accepted May 2021.
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Journal of Human Resources: 58 (5)
Journal of Human Resources
Vol. 58, Issue 5
1 Sep 2023
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The Lost Generation?
Jesse Rothstein
Journal of Human Resources Sep 2023, 58 (5) 1452-1479; DOI: 10.3368/jhr.58.5.0920-11206R1

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The Lost Generation?
Jesse Rothstein
Journal of Human Resources Sep 2023, 58 (5) 1452-1479; DOI: 10.3368/jhr.58.5.0920-11206R1
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  • Article
    • ABSTRACT
    • I. Introduction
    • II. Data
    • III. The Great Recession in the Labor Market
    • IV. Cohort Effects on Employment and Wages
    • V. Medium-Term Scarring and Other Age-Specific Effects
    • VI. Cyclicality and Cohort Effects
    • VII. Conclusion
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    • References
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Keywords

  • E24
  • J2
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