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Losing a Job: The Nonpecuniary Cost of Unemployment in the United States
by
Young, Cristobal
in
Change agents
/ Effectiveness
/ Effects
/ Efficacy
/ Eligibility
/ Employment
/ Family
/ Family Income
/ Hardship
/ Income
/ Insurance
/ Job hunting
/ Job loss
/ Labor markets
/ Low Income Groups
/ Panel surveys
/ Poor
/ Psychological aspects
/ Quality of life
/ Reemployment
/ Reentry Workers
/ Scars
/ Social Welfare
/ Sociology
/ Sociology of work
/ Sociology of work and sociology of organizations
/ U.S.A
/ Unemployed people
/ Unemployed workers
/ Unemployment
/ Unemployment insurance
/ Unit costs
/ United States
/ United States of America
/ Well Being
/ Wellbeing
/ Work
/ Workforce
/ Working population. Employment. Women's work
2012
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Losing a Job: The Nonpecuniary Cost of Unemployment in the United States
by
Young, Cristobal
in
Change agents
/ Effectiveness
/ Effects
/ Efficacy
/ Eligibility
/ Employment
/ Family
/ Family Income
/ Hardship
/ Income
/ Insurance
/ Job hunting
/ Job loss
/ Labor markets
/ Low Income Groups
/ Panel surveys
/ Poor
/ Psychological aspects
/ Quality of life
/ Reemployment
/ Reentry Workers
/ Scars
/ Social Welfare
/ Sociology
/ Sociology of work
/ Sociology of work and sociology of organizations
/ U.S.A
/ Unemployed people
/ Unemployed workers
/ Unemployment
/ Unemployment insurance
/ Unit costs
/ United States
/ United States of America
/ Well Being
/ Wellbeing
/ Work
/ Workforce
/ Working population. Employment. Women's work
2012
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Do you wish to request the book?
Losing a Job: The Nonpecuniary Cost of Unemployment in the United States
by
Young, Cristobal
in
Change agents
/ Effectiveness
/ Effects
/ Efficacy
/ Eligibility
/ Employment
/ Family
/ Family Income
/ Hardship
/ Income
/ Insurance
/ Job hunting
/ Job loss
/ Labor markets
/ Low Income Groups
/ Panel surveys
/ Poor
/ Psychological aspects
/ Quality of life
/ Reemployment
/ Reentry Workers
/ Scars
/ Social Welfare
/ Sociology
/ Sociology of work
/ Sociology of work and sociology of organizations
/ U.S.A
/ Unemployed people
/ Unemployed workers
/ Unemployment
/ Unemployment insurance
/ Unit costs
/ United States
/ United States of America
/ Well Being
/ Wellbeing
/ Work
/ Workforce
/ Working population. Employment. Women's work
2012
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Losing a Job: The Nonpecuniary Cost of Unemployment in the United States
Journal Article
Losing a Job: The Nonpecuniary Cost of Unemployment in the United States
2012
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Overview
Drawing on the Panel Study of Income Dynamics, I track the subjective well-being of individuals as they enter and exit unemployment. Job loss is a salient trigger event that sets off large changes in well-being. The factors expected to improve the lot of the unemployed have limited efficacy: (1) changes in family income are not significantly correlated with well-being; (2) unemployment insurance eligibility seems to partly mitigate the effect of job loss, but is a poor substitute for work; and (3) even reemployment recovers only about two thirds of the initial harm of job loss, indicating a potential long-term scar effect of unemployment. This highlights the deep and intractable hardship caused by unemployment in America.
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