Outside options and worker motivation

Activity: Talk or presentationContributed talkscience-to-science

Description

We study the relationship between outside options and workers’ incentives to exert effort. We first set up a relational contracting model where effort is constrained by the future surplus of an employment relationship. To test the predictions from this model, we evaluate changes in outside options arising from age and experience cutoffs in the Austrian unemployment insurance (UI) system. Results indicate that a 9-week UI benefit extension increases worker absenteeism at the intensive margin by 0.5 days per half-year, on average. Consistent with our model predicting that these effort reductions are more pronounced if the perceived relationship value is small, we find that our effects are stronger for workers with higher potential cost of unemployment, for older workers, in declining rather than in growing firms, in low-wage firms, and for women who have children.
Period23 Sept 2023
Event titleConference of the European Association of Labour Economists
Event typeConference
LocationCzech RepublicShow on map

Fields of science

  • 502018 Macroeconomics
  • 502 Economics
  • 502027 Political economy
  • 502039 Structural policy
  • 502009 Corporate finance
  • 502021 Microeconomics
  • 502010 Public finance
  • 303010 Health economics
  • 502042 Environmental economics
  • 502020 Market research
  • 502047 Economic theory
  • 507016 Regional economy
  • 502003 Foreign trade
  • 502025 Econometrics
  • 502001 Labour market policy
  • 502012 Industrial management
  • 506004 European integration
  • 502002 Labour economics
  • 502013 Industrial economics
  • 502046 Economic policy
  • 504014 Gender studies
  • 405002 Agricultural economics

JKU Focus areas

  • Digital Transformation