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by Yolanda K.
Kodrzycki
July/August 1996
Labor markets have undergone considerable change in
recent years. Manufacturing positions are shrinking,
especially in blue-collar occupations, and real wages
for workers with little education are declining. A rising
share of unemployment is accounted for by workers who
have been permanently laid off.
This article uses data on workers displaced from Massachusetts
companies in the early 1990s who sought government-provided
reemployment assistance to examine, first, their duration
of unemployment and then, for those who found work,
their new wages and other job attributes. The evidence
shows that workers from declining industries suffer
especially sharp wage cuts, and former defense workers
have the most severe adjustment costs of all. The research
also shows that early sign-up for adjustment services
tends to reduce the duration of joblessness. However,
laid-off workers who participate in education and training
programs do not necessarily find better jobs than those
who avail themselves only of more basic forms of assistance.
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