THE DISTRIBUTION OF THE
UNEMPLOYED BY OCCUPATIONAL GROUPS:
A THEORETICAL AND EMPIRICAL ANALYSIS
- Thesis for the Degree of PIL D.
MICHIGAN STATE umvmsm
DUANE E. LEIGH
1968
.........
[HESIb
LIBRARY
., Michigan State
University
This is to certify that the
thesis entitled
THE DISTRIBUTION OF THE UNEMPLOYED BY
OCCUPATIONAL GROUPS: A THEORETICAL AND
EMPIRICAL ANALYSIS.
presented by
Duane Ernest Leigh
has been accepted towards fulfillment
of the requirements for
Ph.D. degree in EconOmIgs
Majbr/ professor
Date @A/{g/ é/y/f
0-169
ABSTRACT
THE DISTRIBUTION OF THE UNEMPLOYED BY OCCUPATIONAL
GROUPS: A THEORETICAL AND EMPIRICAL ANALYSIS
By
Duane E. Leigh‘
This dissertation is an application of the tools of
economic theory to the problem of constructing a short-run
model which determines the distribution of unemployment by
occupational groups through time. The level of unemploy—
ment in a particular occupation is defined to be the differ-
ence between the number of workers supplied and the number
demanded at a given wage rate. This difference is, in
general, positive because unemployed workers cannot obtain
information on job opportunities instantaneously or at zero
cost.
The short-run demand for the members of an occupation
is specified to depend on the expected wage in the occu-
pation and on an index of industry product demand. The
short-run supply of workers to the occupation is a function
of expected wage rates, the probability of employment in
this occupation and in other occupations, and the level of
expected nonwage earnings. The probability of employment
Duane E. Leigh
in an occupation is hypothesized to depend on the ex—
pected unemployment rate in the occupation.
The model was tested using time-series data for six
major occupational groups and six major industries during
the 1958-66 period. A system of six demand and six supply
equations was estimated. Each equation was first esti—
mated by single—equation least squares for alternative
values of the parameter in a first-order autoregressive
process. The value which minimizes the sum of squares of
residuals and the corresponding coefficient estimates are
maximum likelihood estimates of the parameters of the
equation. The entire system of equations was also esti-
mated by a two-step Aitken procedure. This procedure is
intended to take account of possible correlation in con—
temporaneous disturbances across equations in addition to
autocorrelation in individual disturbances.
The most significant variables in the demand equa-
tions were the indices of product demand. This result is
expected from the theory of derived demand. However, a
given increase in aggregate demand does not improve em-
ployment opportunities in all occupations equally. The
evidence indicates that the low skill (high unemployment)
occupations benefit less than do the higher skill occu-
pations. A policy implication is that expansionary
monetary and fiscal policies are effective policy instru—
ments for reducing unemployment only if they are coupled
Duane E. Leigh
with retraining programs designed to increase the occu-
pational mobility of low skilled workers.
The results for the wage variables in the supply
equations are consistent with several long-run studies
which show that individuals respond to differentials in
present values of expected earnings in choosing among
occupations. In addition, significant coefficient esti-
mates were obtained for the unemployment rate variables.
With the exception of the unemployment rates for laborers,
the sign of these estimates verifies the use in the model
of "probabilistic" supply functions. The results for
laborers can be rationalized by consideration of the
probable effect of "hidden unemployment" concentrated
among the low skilled.
THE DISTRIBUTION OF THE UNEMPLOYED BY OCCUPATIONAL
GROUPS: A THEORETICAL AND EMPIRICAL ANALYSIS
By
Duane E. Leigh
A THESIS
Submitted to
Michigan State University
in partial fulfillment of the requirements
for the degree of
DOCTOR OF PHILOSOPHY
Department of Economics
1968
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
I would like to thank the College of Business and
the Department of Economics of Michigan State University
for making funds available for me to proceed with this
study. The University also allowed me the free use of
its CDC 3600 computer.
I was particularly fortunate in having the assis-
tance of a very able guidance committee. Professor James
B. Ramsey read the last two drafts of the study and made
numerous very helpful comments. The suggestions of
Professor Jan Kmenta were beneficial in all phases of
the study. I am also indebted to Professor Kmenta for
his stimulating and very useful courses in mathematical
economics and econometrics.
Finally, I gratefully acknowledge the invaluable
assistance and support of Professor Thomas R. Saving who
served as chairman of the committee. Professor Saving
initially suggested the tOpic, and as the study progressed,
he was an unfailing source of additional ideas and much
needed encouragement.
Of course, the author is solely responsible for
any errors, logical or otherwise, which appear in this
dissertation.
ii
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Page
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS . . . . . . . . . . . . ii
LIST OF TABLES 0 O O O O O O O O O 0 O V
LIST OF FIGURES . . . . . . . . . . . . vi
Chapter
I. INTRODUCTION. . . . . . . . . . . I
II. THE MODEL. . . . . . . . . . . . 9
I. Introduction . . . . . . . 9
II. The Demand for Labor. . . . . . 11
III. The Supply of Labor . . . . . . 16
A. Expected Wage Rates as Argu-
ments in the Labor Supply
Function . . . . . . . . 16
B. Incorporation of Short-Run
Unemployment Into the Model . . 21
C. Expected Unemployment Rates as
Arguments in the Labor Supply
Function . . . . . . 27
IV. The Complete Model . . . . . . A2
A. Determination of the Desired
Vector of Industry Output. . . AA
B. Determination of Firm and
Worker Expectations of Wage
Rates . . . . . . . . A5
C. Determination of the Vector of
Expected Unemployment Rates . . 48
D. Determination of the Vector of
Current Wage Rates . . . . . 50
E. Consolidating the Model . . . 51
iii
Chapter
III. THE DATA AND THE ESTIMATION PROCEDURE
I. The Data . . . . . . .
II. The Estimation Procedure . .
IV. THE EMPIRICAL EVIDENCE AND CONCLUSIONS.
I. The Results of the Estimation
A. The Demand Results.
B. The Supply Results. . . .
II. The Interpretation of the Results
A. Interpreting the Demand Results
B. Interpreting the Supply Results
III. Summary and Conclusion. . . .
APPENDIX . . . . . . . . . . .
BIBLIOGRAPHY. . . . . . . . . . . .
iv
Page
Table
LIST OF TABLES
Alternative Occupations for Members of
Each Occupational Group . . . . .
OLS Estimates of Parameters Appearing in
the Demand Equations Specified in (4.1).
Aitken Estimates of Coefficients Appearing
in the Demand Equations Specified
in (14.1) o o o o o o o
OLS Estimates of Parameters Appearing in
the Supply Equations Specified in (A.2).
Aitken Estimates of Coefficients Appearing
in the Supply Equations Specified
111(2402) 0 o o o o o o c o o
OLS Estimates of the Beta Coefficients of
the Standardized Variables Appearing
in (“‘0 l) o o o o o o
Page
71
80
83
86
87
94
LIST OF FIGURES
Figure
l. The Orthodox Theory of Work-Leisure Choice.
2. Time Paths of Adjusted Expected Wages of
an Employed and an Unemployed Worker in
the rth Occupation. . . . . .
3. Time Path of Adjusted Expected Wages in
Occupation q Viewed by a Member of
Occupation r. . . . . . . . .
A. Work- Leisure Choice Incorporating the
Possibility of Unemployment in an
Occupation . . . . .
vi
Page
20
32
33
36
CHAPTER I
INTRODUCTION
This dissertation is an application of the tools of
economic theory to the problem of explaining the short-
run distribution of occupational unemployment. At neither
the micro nor the macro level is the present state of
economic analysis entirely satisfactory with respect to
the labor market. At the microeconomic level of analysis,
the traditional theory of competitive equilibrium essenti-
ally precludes the unemployment problem because the attain-
ment of general equilibrium implies that all the marginal
conditions are met including those for full employment.
Thus, unemployment functions as a signal that the system
is out of equilibrium; but it is not clearly explained
how the unemployment comes about, nor is the mechanism
specified by which full employment is regained as the
system approaches equilibrium. Arrow neatly sums up the
problem in the following passage:
Neoclassical microeconomic equilibrium with fully
flexible prices presents a beautiful picture of
the mutual articulations of a complex structure,
full employment being one of its major elements.
[But] What is the relation between this world
. and the real world with its recurrent
tendencies to unemployment of labor . . .?1
At the aggregate level of analysis, excess supply
in the labor market is a stable solution to the general
class of macroeconomic models in which all markets but
the labor market are simultaneously cleared. But here
the inadequacy of the micro foundation is reflected in
the seemingly ad hoc assumptions which are employed to
arrive at the unemployment solution. Well-known examples
are the cases of rigid money wages, money illusion on the
part of labor suppliers, and the liquidity trap. Clearly,
the descriptive power of the standard Keynesian model
would be increased if the existence of unemployment could
be demonstrated on the basis of assumptions consistent
with economic theory.2
1Kenneth J. Arrow, "Samuelson Collected," Journal
of Political Economy, LXXV (October, 1967), p. 73A.
2Axel Leijonhufvud argues persuasively that Keynes'
theory, as distinct from the Keynesian model, is consistent
with economic theory. In his theory, Keynes discusses
wage rigidity as a policy recommendation rather than as a
behavioral assumption. Hence, to move from general
equilibrium theory to Keynes' world, it is sufficient
only to give up the assumption of instantaneous price
adjustments. Leijonhufvud notes that "The removal of
the [Walrasian] auctioneer simply means that the gener-
ation of the information needed to coordinate economic
activities in a large system where decision making is
decentralized will take time and will involve economic
costs. No other 'classical' assumptions need be relin—
quished." "Keynes and the Keynesians: A Suggested
Interpretation," Proceedings of the American Economic
Association, LVII (May, 1967), p. AOA. As will be seen
in the following paragraphs in the text, this is very
much the general approach taken here.
The purpose of this dissertation is to construct
and empirically test a model constructed from economic
theory which determines the occupational structure of
unemployment through time. The model is a short-run
model because it is primarily short-run fluctuations in
the unemployment vector in which we are interested. The
level of unemployment in an occupation is defined to be
the number of members of the occupation who are unem—
ployed. Hence, the level of unemployment is the differ-
ence between the number of workers willing to supply
their labor in the occupation at a given wage and the
number of workers demanded by firms at this wage. The
plan of attack is to develop market demand and supply
functions for each occupational group. Then at the market
wage rate, the quantity of labor supplied and demanded,
and hence the level of unemployment, is determined at any
particular moment.
Each occupational supply and demand function is con-
structed assuming rational decision making on the parts
of individual firms and labor suppliers. But because
product demand fluctuates unexpectedly and information
and mobility are not costless, wage offers by firms and
reservation prices of individuals will not in general
adjust with sufficient speed to assure that the number
of workers who desire to work will be equated to the
number of workers demanded by firms in the short run.
Therefore, a positive level of unemployment can exist
in the model without the assumption that labor unions or
other institutions enforce rigid wages. Rather than
serving as an indicator of disequilibrium, as in the
traditional theory of competitive equilibrium, a posi-
tive level of unemployment is inherent in the system
because of the costs involved in supply adjustments.
The labor economics literature related to the
topic of this dissertation is voluminous. Of the studies
examining unemployment as the dependent variable in the
analysis, a large number are concerned with determining
which of two contending hypotheses provides the better
explanation of observed unemployment in the past ten to
fifteen years. The two hypotheses are the inadequate-
aggregate demand hypothesis and the structural unemploy-
3
ment hypothesis. It is widely recognized that empiri-
cal information on the relative importance of the two
hypotheses is critical, particularly from the policy point
of View.“ The present model is not explicitly constructed
3The former hypothesis expresses the macro view—
point that unemployment rates throughout the labor force
rise and fall with changes in the total demand for goods
and services. The latter hypothesis is based on micro
considerations. It states that "structural" changes
have occurred in the economy which have resulted in sub-
stantial changes in the composition of labor demand.
Since workers are not instaneously mobile, unemployment
has become concentrated in particular segments of the
labor force while other segments enjoy a surplus of job
Opportunities.
“A widely quoted monograph supporting the inade-
quate-demand hypothesis is that by James W. Knowles and
to distinguish between the hypotheses; however, the
demand side of the model does provide evidence as to the
impact of changes in product demand on the occupational
structure of labor demand.
In developing the supply side of the model, exten-
sive use is made of two well-developed bodies of liter-
ature. These are the studies examining investment in
human capital and the studies analyzing labor force
participation rates. In the human capital literature,
an individual's effort to increase his earning capacity
is treated as an investment to raise the level of human
5
capital he possesses. As in the case of investment in
Edward Kalachek, Higher Unemployment Rates,l957-l960:
Structural Transformation or Inadequate Demand, Sub-
committee on Economic Statistics of Joint Economic
Committee, U. S. Congress (Washington: U. S. Government
Printing Office, 1961). Two brief statements of the
views of Charles C. Killingsworth, the chief prOponent
of the structural hypothesis, are found in Jack Stieber
(ed.) "StruCtural Unemployment in the United States,"
Employment Problems of Automation and Advanced Techno-
logy: A International Perspective TLondon: Macmillan
and—Company, Ltd., 1966), pp. 128:156 and Garth L.
Mangum (ed.) "Automation, Jobs, and Manpower: The Case
for Structural Unemployment," The Manpower Revolution:
Its Policy Consequences (Garden City, New York: Double-
day & Company, 1965), pp. 97—117.
5Gary S. Becker was instrumental in laying out the
theoretical framework upon which this literature developed.
See his Human Capital (New York: National Bureau of
Economic Research, 196A) and "Investment in Human Capital:
A Theoretical Analysis," Journal of Policital Economy,
LXX, Part 2 (Supplement: October, 1962), pp. 9-A9. In
this Supplement, the contributions of Jacob Mincer, Larry
A. Sjaastad, and George J. Stigler should also be noted.
An additional fruitful application of capital theory to
individual investment decisions is Yoram Ben-Porath, "The
Production of Human Capital and the Life Cycle of Earn-
ings," Journal of Political Economy, LXXV, Part I (August,
1967). pp. 352-365.
physical capital, investing in oneself yields a return,
but only at a cost. Therefore, it is postulated than an
individual will invest in himself up to the point at
which the present value of additional earnings equals
the additional costs.
The studies of labor force participation attempt
to isolate the variables which determine whether or not
individuals will offer their services in the labor market.6
Of special relevance to this dissertation is Mincer's
fundamental contribution examining the supply behavior
of married women.7
In the past few years, a literature has begun to
grow delving into the response of both employers and
workers to changes in product and labor demand.8 Because
6Two fine surveys of this literature are: Jacob
Mincer, "Labor-Force Participation and Unemployment: A
Review of Recent Evidence," in R. A. Gordon and M. S.
Gordon (eds.) Prosperity and Unemployment (New York:
John Wiley & Sons, Inc., 1966), pp. 73-112 and Anthony
Fisher, "Poverty and Labor-Force Participation," Research
Paper P-273, Economic and Political Studies Division,
Institute for Defense Analyses, February, 1966.
7Jacob Mincer, "Labor Force Participation of
Married Women: A Study of Labor Supply," Aspects of
Labor Economics, Conference of the Universities-National
Bureau Committee for Economic Research (Princeton:
Princeton University Press, 1962), pp. 63-97.
8A survey of this literature is found in Charles C.
Holt, "Job Search, Phillips' Wage Relation and Union
Influence, Theory and Evidence," Firm and Market Workshop
Paper 6705, Social Systems Research Institute, University
of Wisconsin, December 1A, 1967. (Mimeographed.) Of
particular use in this dissertation is the approach to
analyzing the costs and returns to information search
information cannot be obtained instantaneously or at zero
cost, some lag in response almost always exists for both
parties. In the development of the present model, the
lag in labor supply is utilized to demonstrate the
plausibility of an unemployment equilibrium situation.
The hypothesis proposed is that individuals view a
positive level of unemployment as the normal case rather
than as a transitory phenomenon which can safely be
ignored in making supply decisions. Consequently, they
consider the relevant set of unemployment rates in eval-
uating alternative occupations against each other. The
import of this hypothesis is that the past levels and
distributions of unemployment become crucial variables
determining workers' supply decisions in the current
period, so that past unemployment is an important determi-
nant of the characteristics of the present structure of
unemployment.
The dissertation is organized in the following
manner. In Chapter II the model is constructed. The
labor demand function for members of an occupation by a
firm is derived from the firm's production function, the
developed by Armen A. Alchian in his yet unpublished
paper "Information Costs and Unemployment" (Mimeographed)
and in University Economics (co-authored with William R.
Allen) (2d ed.; Belmont, California: Wadsworth Publish-
ing Company, Inc., 1967), Chapter 25. Special reference
should also be given the interesting application of
Markov processes by Martin David and Toshiyuki Otsuki
to the problem of predicting short-term movements between
the states of employment, unemployment, and nonpartici-
pation. See their "Forecasting Short-Run Variation in
Labor Market Activity," Review of Economics and Statistics,
XLX (February, 1968), pp. 68—771
definition of the profit function, and the profit-
maximizing constraints. Aggregation is performed first
over all firms in an industry and then over all rele-
vant industries to arrive at the total demand function
for a particular occupation.
The supply function to an occupation is the out—
come of a theory of short—run occupational choice. The
theory is developed on the hypothesis that individuals
behave as if they decide between occupations by compar-
ing the present values of the time streams of adjusted
expected wages in alternative occupations over a short-
run earnings horizon. The adjusted expected wage in an
occupation at any moment in time is the expected wage
adjusted by the probability of employment at that moment.
The expected unemployment rate enters the supply function
as the determinant of the probability of employment in the
occupation.
Chapter III is divided into two sections. The
first is a description of the data chosen to test the
model. In the second, the model is condensed for
statistical estimation, and the statistical techniques
used are considered. Finally, Chapter IV contains a
report of the empirical results and suggests some con-
clusions that may be drawn from the study.
CHAPTER II
THE MODEL
I. Introduction
The model presented in this chapter is an attempt
to explain short—run fluctuations in the occupational
structure of unemployment. We proceed under the assump-
tion that individuals and firms act so as to maximize
utility and profits, respectively. However, supply and
demand decisions in occupational markets must be made in
an uncertain and rapidly changing environment. The effects
of external events and shifts in consumer tastes result in
changes in the level and composition of product demand.
These changes are reflected in the demand for labor, and,
after a lag, in the vector of wage offers. However, in-
formation on wage rates in alternative occupations is not
available to workers instantaneously or at zero cost. Nor
is mobility costless after information is obtained. As
information is collected, the market works toward equating
supply and demand, but, in general, this process is not
completed in a short-run period. Consequently, a positive
level of unemployment can exist in every occupational
10
group. There is no need to place institutional or other
constraints on wage flexibility to demonstrate the V
existence of unemployment.
Suppose we describe the occupational structure of
unemployment at a particular moment in time by the
following m-dimensional vector:
(2.1) (U U ... U
lt’ 2t’ ’ mt)’
where th (q=l,...,m) is the number of unemployed workers
in the qth occupational group at time t. Each component
of this vector is defined to be the difference between
the quantity of labor supplied and the quantity demanded
at a given wage rate. We denote the number of workers who
are willing to supply their services in occupation q by
tat and the number of members of occupation q demanded by
d
qt’ qt’
the unemployment vector at time t may be written:
firms by A At a given wage w the qth component of
" ”d
(2.2) th = tat - tqt (q=l,...,m).
Our approach is to construct supply and demand functions
for the qth occupation at time t. Using (2.2) we are then
able to solve for the level of unemployment in the occu-
pation at a given wage.
This chapter is divided into three sections. In
Section II, static general equilibrium theory is utilized
to construct a short-run demand function for workers in
11
the qth occupation. Section III is devoted to the develop-
ment of the corresponding short-run supply function.
These functions are expressed in terms of the vectors of
expected wage and unemployment rates and the endogenous
vector of industry output.
Section IV contains hypotheses specifying how
expectations are formulated and how the other endogenous
variables are determined. To complete the system, a set
of relationships is introduced to determine the vector of
current wage rates.
II. The Demand for Labor
We begin the construction of the demand side of the
model by deriving the short-run labor demand function for
an individual firm. Then aggregation is performed over
all firms in the industry and over all industries to ob-
tain the total short—run demand function facing the mem—
bers of the qth occupation. Each multi-product firm is
viewed as a combination of two or more single-product
firms. Furthermore, each single-product firm is assumed
(l) to be perfectly competitive on both the product and
the factor markets, and (2) to employ the same factors of
production as the other firms producing the same product.
An implication of these assumptions for the multi-product
firm is that the level of output of any single product
does not affect the output of its other products. We
define an industry to be the number of single-product
12
firms producing a distinct product. The model is con-
structed for a short-run situation in which there are m
variable inputs (types of labor) and one fixed input
(the stock of capital) in the economy.
Consider the ith firm in the jth industry,
i=l,...,nJ and j=l,...,M. The firm's demand for the
qth labor input is derived from its production function,
the definition of profit, and the profit—maximizing
constraint. The following general production function
is employed:1
(2.3) yij = fiJ(Al,...,£m,kJ) (i=l,...,nJ;j=l,...,M),
where yiJ denotes the level of output, £l""’£m denote
levels of the m variable (labor) inputs, and k denotes
J
the quantity of the fixed input capital in the jth in-
dustry. The definition of expected total profit for the
firm is
(2.A) w*
= a _ x s a
13 pjyij (wlfil + ... + wmim + w k ),
k 3
where p3 is the expected market price of the jth product
and (w§,...,w;,wfi) is the (m+l)—dimensiona1 expected input
price vector facing the firm. Differentiating (2.A)
1Since the analysis in this and the following
section is static, the time subscript on all variables
is omitted to simplify the notation.
l3
partially with respect to each variable input, setting
the resulting equations equal to zero, and introducing
a random disturbance term yields the following m profit-
maximizing conditions:
3y
*__£l.= * =
(2.5) pjalq wq + eqij (q 1,. ,m)
A rationale for the disturbance term (eqij) is that
entrepreneurs modify their profit-maximizing input de-
cisions in response to essentially random disturbances
occurring outside the system which are not reflected in
the eXpected wage and price parameters. With the m+2
equations of (2.3), (2.A), and (2.5) in the unknowns
yij’flIj’zl""’£m’ we can solve for the levels of profit,
output, and labor inputs in terms of the expected para-
meters given to the firm. The profit-maximizing level
of the qth labor input is
~
= * * *
(2-6) £qij hqu(pJ:wls°'°swm3€qu)3
~
where lqij is the number of members of occupation q which
the firm desires to employ.
To derive the labor demand function for the industry,
we cannot simply sum the demand functions of the individual
firms for the reason that the product price is not fixed
to the industry. The industry product demand function is
based on the results of individual consumer utility
1A
maximization aggregated to the industry level. For our
purposes, it is specified that the desired level of out-
put of an industry is a function of the own expected
price and the expected prices of all other products.
Hence, the demand function for the jth product may be
written
(2.7) §, = gj
(i=l,---,M),
where §J is the desired level of output of industry j.
We assume that the Jacobian of the system of functions
designated in (2.7) exists and is nonsingular for the
relevant intervals on the pJ's, that is,
5p1 5p2 5pM
3g2 3g2 3g2 # O
apl¥ 3p2¥ O O O 3pM¥ O
BgM BgM agM
Appeal to the Inverse Function Theorem allows us to
rewrite (2.7) as
(2.9) p3 = hj(§l,...,§M) (j=l,...,M).
15
Substituting, the labor demand function of the jth in—
dustry is
I
(2.10) 1
go
I
_ ~ ~ * *
qj quEhJ(yl,...,yM),wl,...,wmeqj
= a x ” "
nqj(wl’°"’wm’y1"'°’yM’€qj)’
where A is the number of members of the qth occupation
qJ
which the firms in industry j desire to employ, and e
qJ
is the sum of the disturbances for the individual firms.
The total demand function for the members of the
qth occupation is obtained by summing over all the in-
dustries employing members of this occupation. The total
demand function is
~d M
(2.11) A = Z n 3
q 3:1 q
= Gq(w§’...’W;,yl,...,yM,Eq) (q=l,ooo’m),
with the partial derivatives2
3G 8G. 3G
(2.12) W3 < 0, WA > o (rat'q), 5-37—91 > o (j=l,...,M).
.q r J,
2The sign of the partial derivative of G with re-
spect to yJ is due to the assumption that
8G M 3G a~ a *
__9 > 2 ~ 5:; _g_
ay i=1 8y p1 3y
J #3 i 3
That is, the direct effect of a change in the quantity
16
III. The Supply of Labor
In this section, the supply side of the model is
developed from a theory of short-run occupational choice.
Since it is a short-run model, we consider only the be-
havior of individuals who are in a position to move be—
tween occupations or between market and nonmarket activity
within a short period of time. That is, we are interested
in those individuals whose supply decisions have a shorte
run impact on the occupational distribution of the labor
force. Here, the labor force is defined as the total
number of workers either employed or unemployed in an
occupation. Unemployment in the short run comes about
because the time period selected for analysis is frequently
too short to allow an individual to both choose an occu-
pation and choose a job within the occupation.
In the first part of this section, the individuals
whose supply behavior is relevant to a short-run model are
identified, and then we supply a rationale for the in-
clusion of current expected wages in the supply functions
of these individuals.
A. Expected Wage Rates as
Apguments in the Labor
Sppply Function
It is first assumed that occupational groups may
be ranked by the stock of human capital that must be
demanded of product j on the demand for workers of the
qth type exceeds the indirect effect appearing via
substitute and complement relationships in the product
markets of all other goods, even in the most extreme case.
17
possessed by a worker in order to enter the occupation.
Secondly, it is assumed that an individual possessing a
given stock of capital may enter any of the occupations
(if such occupations exist) requiring a lower stock.
Upward mobility, however, requires that he first invest
in himself in order to increase his level of skills.
Examples of pertinent investment in human capital are
information gathering, education, migration, and on-the—
job training.
The costs of the investments described above may
be separated into two components: (I) the direct costs
of purchased goods and services, e.g., tools, tuition,
moving costs, etc., and (2) the earnings foregone, that
is, the present value of productive services withdrawn
from another occupational group. The individual will in-
vest in himself up to the point at which the present value
of additional earnings from investing equals the present
value of the additional costs.
To acquire a higher level of skills for upward
occupational mobility, an individual must normally under-
take an investment over a long—run period. The direct
and opportunity costs of this type of investment are
large enough that in order to justify such investments
the present value of prospective earnings over a long-
run horizon (perhaps a lifetime horizon) must normally
be considered. Because of the length of time required
18
to complete the necessary investment, we ignore upward
mobility as a possible short-run supply adjustment.
Therefore, the short—run sources of additional members
to an occupation, say occupation q, are: (1) members
of occupations which require higher levels of skills
than does the qth occupation, and (2) workers currently
outside the labor force (i.e., workers not currently
members of any occupation) who possess at least the
minimum level of skills to enter occupation q. For
these individuals, the costs of investing in occupation
q involve only the costs of collecting job information
and moving costs. Since their investment costs are
relatively minor, they are in a position to enter
occupation q in response to favorable job conditions
which may prove to be only "temporary." That is, these
individuals may make their supply decision with respect
to the qth occupation on the basis of the present value
of expected returns in the occupation for a short-run
earnings horizon. Over a short—run horizon, it is
reasonable to assume that the current expected wage is
a reliable measure of future expected wages. The work-
leisure analysis of traditional wage theory provides a
useful point of departure for developing a theory of
short-run occupational choice.
Suppose that the decision to work in the short-run
is an all—or—nothing decision, meaning that an individual
anticipates either working full time, say, eight hours
19
per day, or specializing in leisure, where leisure
refers to all forms of nonmarket activity. Further,
assume that an individual may be a member of only one
occupation at any moment in time. In Figure l, we
depict an individual's indifference map with income
per unit of time on the vertical axis and leisure per
unit of time on the horizontal axis. The distance OLm
represents twenty-four hours per day of leisure and OLO
represents sixteen hours per day of leisure. The level
of income OY is the income received other than that
O
earned from supplying labor on the market, and Y Y is
O T
wage income. Points A and B are assumed to be the only
alternatives available to the individual.
Conceptually, it is possible to distinguish between
the following two decisions for an individual: (1) whether
to choose the qth occupation over all other relevant
occupations; and if occupation q is selected, (2) the
choice between this occupation and full-time leisure.
He makes the first decision by picking out the set of
occupations for which he is qualified, and from the
corresponding set of eXpected wage rates selecting the
highest. Suppose that the expected wage in the qth
occupation is the highest. This expected wage is repre-
sented in Figure l by the slope of the line segment BC.
Any lower wage is represented by a line segment, such
as BD, of slope less than BC in absolute value.
20
Y/
A
Figure l.--The orthodox theory of work-leisure
choice.
The individual's second decision depends on whether
the indifference curve passing through point A is higher
than the indifference curve passing through point B. In
Figure l, I2I2 exceeds IlIl so that the individual will
supply his labor to the qth occupation. However, if the
expected wage in occupation q should fall to a level
lower than the wage rate represented by the slope of BD
and still remain the highest of the set of available
expected wage rates, the individual will choose to
specialize in leisure.
21
The analysis depicted in Figure l is deficient in
that attention to expected wage rates may not be sufficient
to evaluate expected earnings in alternative occupations
if conditions of less than full employment prevail. In
the next part of this section it is argued that short-
run unemployment arises because of the time involved in
the adjustment process required to move from one occu-
pation to another or to move into or out of the labor
force. The essence of the argument is that the adjust—
ment process may be carried out most efficiently while a
worker is unemployed. Differences in demand conditions
across occupations give rise to the occupational distri-
bution of unemployment. The discussion is carried out in
a framework of individuals' reservation prices.
B. Incorporation of Short-Run
Unemployment Into the
Model5
The reservation price represents a worker's evalu—
ation of his market alternatives. Consider an individual
employed in an industry which suffers a decrease in pro-
duct demand. Given that the labor supply function is
3Many of the important concepts in this discussion
of reservation prices are developed in Alchian, "Infor-
mation Costs and Unemployment" and in Alchian and Allen,
University Economics, pp. A9A-509. Other papers dealing
with the topic of job search are George J. Stigler,
"Information in the Labor Market," Journal of Political
Econom , LXX, Part 2 (Supplement: October, 1962), pp.
95-105; Albert Rees, "Information Networks in Labor Mar-
kets," Proceedings of the American Economic Association,
LVI6(May, 1966), pp. 559-5663 and Holt, op. cit., pp.
59- 5.
22
not perfectly elastic, he can be employed in this in-
duStry only at a lower wage. Suppose, however, he feels
that he has alternative employment opportunities in his
occupation (or in occupations requiring a lower level
of skills) at a higher wage than that now offered him.
That is, his reservation price exceeds the wage his
employer is offering. Rather than lowering his reser-
vation price, we expect that he will make an effort to
obtain information on job vacancies in other industries!4
Since this information is not available instantaneously,
time is consumed in the search process. As the worker
continues to search out information, he will acquire an
ever larger sample of the wage offers being made by em-
ployers. Finally, he will terminate the job search when
the increment in earnings by which his best offer exceeds
his next best offer suggests that the expected increment
from further search is less than the cost of the addi-
tional search.5 At this time he will adjust his reser-
vation price if he concludes that an adjustment is neces-
sary to secure employment. There is a limit to the
length of the search process because the "law" of
diminishing returns suggests that increments in earnings
“The principles outlined here also apply to the
case of a worker who revises his reservation price up-
ward and quits his job even though he could continue
to work at his previous wage rate.
5Alchian, 0p. cit., p. 12.
23
will begin to decline after some positive level of
investment in search. The costs to be considered are
the earnings foregone during the period of search, the
direct costs of search (e.g., the costs of using the
services of employment agencies and of traveling to
job interviews), and the costs of moving.
The individual in the above situation has the
following short-run alternatives Open to him: (I)
continue working at the reduced wage and engage in job
search during leisure hours, (2) begin working in the
highest—wage job immediately available and engage in
job search during leisure hours, or (3) devote himself
full time to searching for a job. Except in the unlikely
situation that an immediately available job is a global
optimum, the second alternative is more costly than the
first because it involves two moves, whereas the other
alternatives involve only one. The first move is to the
immediately available job, while the second is to the
job chosen at the end of the search period. Consequently,
the second alternative will never be selected over the
first unless the increment in earnings exceeds the addi-
tional cost of an extra move.
The third alternative would seem to be the highest
cost in terms of foregone earnings, but because the un-
employed worker specializes in job search, he can, in
general, accumulate more information about wage offers
2A
in a given period of time than an employed worker is
able to acquire. Consider two workers who possess
equivalent levels of skills. If the above proposition
holds, the unemployed worker is able to make his choice
from a set of alternatives and begin work some time be-
fore the employed worker is in a position to choose
among a comparable set of job offers. For this reason,
it is likely to be the employed worker who is at a net
disadvantage with respect to foregone earnings. If so,
it would be completely rational for a worker to select
unemployment as the best alternative state during his
adjustment period.6 The fact that information is not
available instantaneously or at zero cost implies, in
this case, that a positive level of unemployment is con-
sistent with optimal individual behavior. Thus, unem-
ployment may be said to exist in short-run equilibrium
where supply adjustments are a part of the unconstrained
functioning of labor markets. However, unemployment is
not consistent with long-run equilibrium which occurs
only when all adjustments have been carried out.
Returning to Figure 1, if a worker determines that
his highest expected wage is less than the expected wage
rate represented by the lepe of line segment BD after
his period of search is completed, he will leave the
6The result that it is rational does not imply that
unemployment is painless to the worker and his family.
Indeed, every effort should be made to increase the flow
of job information and hence shorten the period of ad-
justment.
25
labor force and specialize in leisure, either investing
in himself to upgrade his level of skills or devoting
full time to home work. This expected wage may there-
fore be defined to be the worker's reservation price
for remaining in the labor force.
The above analysis implies that except in the case
where changes in product demand are always positive,
there will exist a positive level of unemployment con-
sistent with short-run equilibrium in any occupational
market. The level of unemployment depends on the nature
of fluctuations in product demand faced by the industries
which employ the members of the occupation.7
The greater
are the frequencies and magnitudes of the fluctuations,
the larger is the number of workers placed in a position
where they may choose to be unemployed during their ad-
justment period rather than to accept a lower wage.
Consequently, the level of unemployment in the occupation
increases, even in the case in which the fluctuations
average out to zero across industries.
In the case of a downward shift in the entire vector
of industry product demand, workers do not, in general,
immediately recognize that the distribution of wage
ovvers has shifted downward. This realization occurs
only after they have collected a sufficiently large
7This discussion abstracts from the unemployment
impact of changes in supply due to long-run forces such
as changes in the demographic composition of the pOpu-
lation.
26
sample to infer that the reason wage offers are lower
than anticipated is a decrease in demand rather than
simple bad luck. Hence, while the market eventually
forces workers to adjust their reservation prices down-
ward, the length of the average adjustment period in-
creases so that the level of short-run unemployment is
higher in each occupational group.
To conclude the discussion of short-run unemploy-
~ment, the special cases of fixed proportions in pro-
duction and downward rigid wages are incorporated into
our theory. These are the two cases usually pointed
out as the causes of unemployment.
In a full-employment situation with fixed pro-
portions, a shift in the composition of product demand
results in an excess supply of the members of some occu—
pations. The marginal product of these workers falls to
zero so that there is no positive wage at which employers
find it profitable to retain them on the payroll. Simi-
larly, effective minimum wages remove the option for some
workers of working at reduced wages in the face of a de-
crease in demand.
In periods of a general decrease in demand, effec-
tive minimum wages and/or fixed proportions reduce the
total number of positive wage offers that employers can
make. Thus, an individual finds that he must increase
his investment in search in order to obtain a given
27
sample of wage Offers. TO the extent that these con-
straints on firm behavior are more significant in some
occupational markets than in others, they serve to
accentuate inter-occupational differences in unemploy-
ment rates. Indeed, the least—skilled unemployed
workers may find employment Opportunities entirely
closed Off, with a consequent rise in hard-core unem-
ployment.
C. Expected Unemployment Rates
as Arguments in the Labor
Supply Function
The analysis presented in Figure 1 does not take
into account the existence of unemployment. The inclusion
Of unemployment in the system means that occupational
choice must be made under conditions of uncertainty. A
particular job does not guarantee a certain time path of
earnings, even over a short—run horizon. Consequently,
the vector of expected wages is not the only factor in—
volved in short—run decision making. The rational indi-
vidual will also take into consideration the possibility
that unforeseen changes in demand may occur which result
in his unemployment. At each moment in time he will com-
pare his current position (whether employed or not) with
the information he has on the conditions existing in the
occupations he is qualified to enter. Consider his
evaluation at time t=tO on the assumption that if he
selects a particular occupation he expects that he will
28
be a member of this occupation for at least the duration
of his short-run earnings horizon, which we suppose to
end at t=T. In what follows, a theory is developed in
which the individual first chooses among occupations,
taking into account the possibility that he may be un-
employed for a period of time in any one of the occu-
pations. Then he decides whether to enter or to remain
in the occupation judged to be the best among those con—
sidered.
An individual belonging to a particular occu—
pational group is either employed or unemployed in that
group; hence, at any time t, his employment position in
the occupation may be described by a binomial probability
distribution. Moreover, it is expected that the proba-
bility of employment in occupation q at a future moment
in time for a worker currently employed in the occupation
is not the same as the probability Of employment for a
worker currently unemployed in the occupation.
Suppose that an individual is employed in occupation
Viewed at t
q at time t the conditional probability
0' O’
Of being employed at the expected market wage in the qth
occupation at time t (tO 0.
Bug at
The negative sign of the second of the two partial
derivatives in (2.15) is rationalized as follows: the
further in the future is t, the less certain is the indi-
vidual that he will continue to be employed. On the
other hand, the sign Of the second of the partial deriva-
tives in (2.16) is positive because the individual may
be more certain of finding a job the longer the period
in which he engages in search.
30
At any time t, it is hypothesized that a worker
adjusts the expected wage rate in occupation q, denoted
by x3, by the conditional probability Of employment at
t--either (2.13) or (2.1A) depending on the worker's
current employment state. We define the adjusted ex-
pected wage in occupation q at time t to be x3 times the
conditional probability Of employment in occupation q at
t. Thus, if a worker is employed in the qth occupation
at time t the present value of the time path Of ad-
0’
justed expected wages in occupation q is given by
T
(2.17) pvq = {O[g(t,ua)-Xa]e
i(t—to)dt
3
where the expression in brackets is the adjusted expected
wage of an employed worker at time t, and i is the rate of
interest. The interest rate is assumed constant during
the short-run horizon.
Conversely, the present value of adjusted expected
earnings in occupation q as viewed by a worker currently
unemployed in the occupation is
T
= , -i(t-t )
(2.18) qu I [h(t,ua) xale 0 dt.
to
Finally, the present value of adjusted expected
earnings in occupation q evaluated by an unemployed
individual outside the qth occupation is
31
T
(2.19) PV = I [h(t,u*)-x*]e’i(t'to)dt - $[1-e‘i(t1’to)]
q to q q 1
3
where c is the direct cost Of investment in occupation q
at time t (toststl), and t1 is the end of the investment
period. The individual's choice among the set of occu-
pations available to him depends upon which one Offers
the highest present value Of adjusted expected earnings
net of any direct investment costs.
Figure 2 presents two time paths of adjusted ex-
pected earnings drawn for i; and E: which are assumed to
be the current values Of the expected wage and the ex-
pected unemployment rate, respectively, in occupation r,
an alternative to occupation q. The function AA repre-
sents the time path of adjusted expected earnings for a
member Of occupation r employed at time to, while BB
represents the time path for the same worker should he
currently happen to be unemployed in the occupation. The
vertical axis measures adjusted expected wages, denoted
by A(x;), and time is measured on the horizontal axis.
The second partial derivatives with respect to t of the
conditional probabilities of employment (2.13) and (2.1A)
are not specified so that the time paths AA and BB could
be re-drawn in several alternative ways consistent with
E; and 5; so long as the SIOpes of the functions are
negative and positive, respectively, in the interval
32
(tO,T].8 However, the partial derivatives with respect1
to us in (2.15) and (2.16) imply that for any fig>fi¥,
each time path would shift such that every point on the
new function is lower than the corresponding point on
the old function for any t (tOt
T
t 0
Figure 2.——Time paths of adjusted expected wages
of an employed and an unemployed worker in the rth occu-
pation.
8The particular time paths depicted in Figure 2
are drawn on the assumption that at any time t, a cur-
rently employed worker never evaluates the probability
Of retaining his job to be less than the probability
he would assign to Obtaining employment were he currently
unemployed. A further assumption that might be made is
that in either case the worker views his probability Of
employment to be asymptotic to (l-u*). On this assumption,
the_timg paths AA and BB would be dann asymptotic to
(l-u;)-x;.
33
As mentioned previously, the sources of short—run
change in the relative quantities of labor supplied to
occupations are (1) members of higher occupational groups
who switch to lower occupations, and (2) individuals who
move into and out of the labor force. We examine first
the considerations relevant to a worker deciding between
occupations.
Figure 3 illustrates the position of a member Of
occupation r, either employed or unemployed, who is
Figure 3.——Time path Of adjusted expected wages in
occupation q as viewed by a member of occupation r.
considering the possibility of entering occupation q.
For this worker, one may conceptually distinguish the
process Of selecting an occupation on the basis of
general information on wage and employment conditions
from the process of selecting a particular job within
3A
the chosen occupation. In the figure, it is assumed
that the time required to complete investments in infor-
mation and/or geographical mobility in selecting occu-
pation q is the interval [t0,tl]. The direct cost of
these investments charged against expected earnings in
the occupation is shown by the rectangle (chtotl).
In addition, further investment in job search may be
necessary to sample the industry wage Offers being made
to members of the occupation. If this investment has a
direct cost, the net expected wage in occupation q is
negative for an additional time period, say (t1,t
2).
For tat however, the individual can anticipate a
2:
positive adjusted expected wage. A portion of total
short—run unemployment in an occupation therefore arises
because the time interval considered is long enough to
allow a worker to select an occupation, but it is too
short for him to search out the best available job.
The Opportunity cost Of investing to enter occu-
pation q is the present value of the time path of ad-
justed expected earnings in occupation r--either AA or
BB in Figure 2. But it is unlikely that a worker who
is dissatisfied with his present job in occupation r
can Obtain the information necessary to locate the best
job in an alternative occupation with instant search or
while working at the old job to avoid unemployment.
Hence, the time path AA in Figure 2, the present value
35
Of which is calculated by (2.17), does not represent the
relevant Opportunity cost of investment in occupation q
for most individuals. In what follows, we consider
explicitly only the case of workers who are unemployed
for some positive period of time. The decision between
any two occupations is therefore made by comparing pre-
sent values calculated by (2.18) and (2.19).
It is reasonable to assume that an individual's
utility function includes the following arguments: the
rate of consumption Of goods and services, the rate of
consumption of leisure, and tastes for particular occu-
pations. Define the total present value of expected
earnings in an occupation (TPV) to be the sum of the pre-
sent value of expected nonwage earnings (PVO), which is
assumed to be invarient between occupations, and the
present value Of adjusted expected earnings from working
in the occupation (PV). Then in the two-occupation case,
the utility function may be rewritten in the arguments
TPVq, TPVr, and leisure, since tastes for occupations
exist. Each argument may be measured on one axis of a
three-dimensional diagram. Assume, as in Figure 1, that
an individual anticipates working either eight hours per
day or not at all during his short-run horizon, and that
he works in either occupation but not in both. To choose
between the occupations, he will select the one which
puts him on the higher indifference curve at a level Of
36
leisure equal to sixteen hours per day. This will neces-
sarily be a corner solution.
Suppose that occupation q is preferred to occupation
r. The indifference curves presented in Figure A are
slices of the three-dimensional indifference map at
TPVr = PV As in Figure l, the distance OLm represents
0'
twenty-four hours per day Of leisure and OL represents
0
sixteen hours per day Of leisure. The vertical axis
measures TPVq; the distance OPVO is the present value
of expected nonwage earnings, while OPVq—OPVO is the
present value of adjusted expected earnings in occupation
q. Given the assumptions stated above, points E and H
TPV
PV
PV
>L/t
Figure A.-—Work-1eisure choice incorporating the
possibility of unemployment in an occupation.
37
are the only possible solutions. Since point H lies on
a higher indifference curve than does point B, market
labor in occupation q is preferred to specialization in
leisure. The higher is PVq, in general, the more likely
an individual is to enter the qth occupation rather than
to devote full-time to leisure. In this way, the level
of PVq enters an individual's supply Of labor function to
occupation q by determining the choice between this occu-
pation and others, and, if occupation q is selected, it
also determines the choice between the occupation and
full-time leisure.
Now suppose that the ith individual Obtains wage
and unemployment information for mi alternative occu-
pations (mism), including the qth occupation. Then the
following mi-dimensional vector is included as an argu-
ment in his supply function to the qth occupation:
(2.20) (PV .,PVm ).
,..
l 1
To simplify further, the following assumptions are made:
(1) the direct costs of investment are a minor consider-
ation in inter-occupational mobility; (2) the discount
rate applied to the time streams Of adjusted expected
earnings is the same for all occupations; and (3) an
unemployed worker assigns the same conditional proba-
bility distribution to all occupations, so that if
ua=u;, the worker views the probability Of being
38
employed in occupation q at time t to be the same as in
occupation r. Under this set Of assumptions, (2.20) may
be rewritten as
(2.21) (x§,...,x;i,u§,...,u;i).
It is mathematically equivalent to express this vector
in the following manner:
x* Xx * u*
(2.22) (fin-~56} ,xgm WES ,ua).
1 mi 1 mi
Up till now, no attention has been given to how
the level Of nonwage earnings is determined. Clearly, a
number of variables are involved including the level of
nonhuman wealth an individual possesses. In what follows,
we continue to ignore the effect of fluctuations in non-
wage income except for the important special case of
"secondary workers," i.e., males younger than 25 years
and Older than 5A years of age and all females. Exactly
the same principles of occupational choice outlined above
apply in this case, except that one additional feature--
the level Of nonwage earnings—-is given explicit consider-
ation.
Most secondary workers are assured Of a positive
level of nonmarket income simply by virtue Of being a
family member and supplying their services within the
39
family.9 This is true except during periods in which
the "primary" wage earner is unemployed. Therefore,
the present value of expected nonwage earnings of a
secondary worker over his short-run horizon depends on
the expected employment position of the primary wage
earner during this interval. It is assumed that the
expected employment position is an inverse function of
the current unemployment rate of married males, up. In
terms of Figure A, an increase in up is shown by a de-
crease in the distance OPVO, and, hence, a downward
movement Of point E on the vertical line drawn perpendi-
cular to the leisure axis at OLm. The higher is up, the
more likely it is that there will exist a wage Offer
which has a present value that exceeds the secondary
worker's reservation price for market labor.10
The ith individual's supply function to the qth
occupation may now be written as
9The inclusion Of family income in the labor supply
functions Of married women, the major component of total
secondary workers, is theoretically and empirically
treated in Mincer, "Labor Force Participation of Married
Women: A Study Of Labor Supply," pp. 63—97.
lOThis type of supply behavior is referred to in
the literature as the "additional worker" hypothesis.
According to this hypothesis, as the level Of economic
activity falls, labor force participation increases as
secondary workers enter the market in an attempt to
Offset the loss Of income by primary wage earners.
AO
X* X* u* u*
= *
(2.23) lqi fqi(xls'°°s§%iaxqsfi%a°° Wagg’: qu)
where nqi is a random disturbance term reflecting the
short—run impact Of random nonmarket variables on the
individual's labor market behavior.
Equation (2.23) is not an individual supply
function in the usual sense Of a worker supplying his
services in a particular occupation if the expected
wage rate exceeds his reservation price for entering
the occupation. Instead, joint consideration is given
the expected unemployment rate in the occupation.
Viewed in this manner, the equation is correctly labeled
a "probabilistic" supply function since it is the ex-
pected wage rate adjusted by the probability of employ—
ment through time in each occupation that is the crucial
variable to the individual.
A worker either supplies his services to the qth
occupation or he does not. Hence, equation (2.23) may
=1 if the worker
qi
enters occupation q, and fiqi=0 if he does not. Aggre—
gating across individuals, the probabilistic supply
be regarded as a step function where A
function to the qth occupation takes the following form:
~ x* x* u* u*
S
(2.2“) Qq = Hq(xl,...,-X%,Xa,ul’oo.’-‘lfi’ué’up’nq) (q=l,ooo,m),
' m m
Al
where I: is the number of workers who are willing to
supply their services in the qth occupation, and nq is
the sum Of the individual disturbances.ll If we assume
that equation (2.2A) is a continuously differentiable
function, the partial derivatives are assumed to have
the following signs:
8H OH
> O (isq); 53%> 0; u
q
3 a?
i
(2.25) < 0;
Q)
0)
9:4...“ ==
8H 3H
. __3
THU? < 0’ Eu > 0'
q p
The vector Of expected wage rates and the variable
up are representative of arguments similar to those fre-
quently found in ordinary supply functions. The test of
the probabilistic supply function specified here is
whether or not the vector of expected unemployment rate
variables is significant in the empirical analysis of
the model.
llThe aggregation process used to Obtain (2.2A)
involves the assumption that all individuals' short-run
time horizons are approximately the same length. In
addition, the aggregation assumes that each individual
calculates the present value of adjusted expected earn-
ings using the same discount rate. This would be the
case if all individuals could borrow and lend in the
capital market at the same rate of interest.
A2
IV. The Complete Model
In this section, the model is formulated in terms
of distinct time periods so that it is readily amenable
to empirical testing using discrete data. The variables
in the model are now defined as follows:
~d
iqt
number of members of occupation q which
firms desire to employ at the beginning of
period t;
number Of positions filled by individual
members of occupation q in period t;
number Of workers who desire to provide
their services in occupation q at the be-
ginning Of period t;
number Of members Of the qth occupation
employed in period t;
number of unemployed members of occupation
q in period t;
wage which firms expect to pay members of
occupation q at the beginning of period t;
wage expected in occupation q by labor
suppliers at the beginning of period t;
market wage in the qth occupation in
period t;
expected unemployment rate in occupation q
at the beginning Of period t;
A3
C
I
pt - unemployment rate of married males in period
t; and
§jt desired level of output Of industry j at
the beginning Of period t.
The model develOped thus far for the qth occu-
pational group consists Of the following system of
equations for period t:
~d
= x * ~ ~
(2.26) gqt Gq(wlt"°"wmt’ylt"’°’yMt’€qt)
I
p
X*t X*t "*t u*t
S = * x
(2.27) qt Hq(§%"°"§%€’xqt’fi%€""’ng’uqt’upt’nqt)
(2.28) Uq
III
p
I
A
Q
N
H
U
U
3
v
V
_ ~s .
where uqt - th/th' Equation (2.26) is the market demand
function, equation (2.27) is the market supply function,
and (2.28) is a definitional equation. The relationships
between 2d and Ad and between is and As are the
qt qt qt qt
following:
, ~s ~d .
(i) If th > gqt (i.e., th>0), then
”d _ d ~s s _
qt - £qt and gqt - zqt th.
~s ~d
(ii) If zqt < th (i.e., th<0), then
is = 1 and A - 1d — U
AA
It is clear that zit a sat.
In Part A of this section, a set of equations
determining the desired vector Of industry output is
specified. Then in Parts B and C, expectations mechan-
isms-are formulated for the vectors Of expected wage
and unemployment rates. A set Of equations determining
the current wage vector is described in Part D. In the
final part of the section, Part E, the complete model
is drawn together.
A. Determination Of the
Desired Vector of Industry
Output
The firm simultaneously determines its desired rate
of output and its desired level Of employment; therefore,
a set Of equations determining the desired output vector
must be developed. For our purposes, a very simple out-
put determination model is specified. However, it is
recognized that a more detailed treatment of this problem
might be desirable.
Because the firm must Operate under conditions Of
uncertainty, we assume that it utilizes a bit of infor-
mation it does possess, namely, last period's sales, to
determine its desired output level. At the beginning of
period t, this assumption may be written as
(2.29) yth = fij(sijt-l) (i=l,...,nj;j=l,...,M),
A5
where Sijt—l is the sales volume Of the ith firm in the
jth industry in period t-l. Assuming a fixed composition
Of the industry, the desired level Of output for industry
j at the beginning of period t is
(2.30) th = fj(sjt_1).
where s. is the sales Of industry j in period t-l.
jt—l
B. Determination of Firm
and Worker Expectations
Of Wage Rates
Firm Expectations.—-Given a change in the level or
composition of product demand, there are two cases to be
considered from the point of view of firms in the jth
industry. First, suppose that the demand for the "own"
product increases. Each firm in the industry now finds
it desirable to increase output, and, consequently, ex—
pand its labor force in order to maximize profits. One
alternative facing firms which find it necessary to attract
additional workers is to increase their wage offers.12
Hence, a change in the wages offered in industry j may
be assumed to be a function of the change in the demand
for the product produced by the industry.
Now suppose that the product demand facing the jth
industry is constant or declining, but other industries
12Examples of nonwage alternatives are increasing
expenditures on search, revising productivity standards
downward, upgrading existing employees, and expanding
on-the-job training programs.
A6
are enjoying an increase in demand. It is likely that
some Of these industries employ members Of the same
occupations as are employed in industry j, or that some
other "spill—over" relationship exists between the wages
paid in these industries and in industry j. If so, the
firms in industry j may find that they have to raise the
wages paid to workers they desire to keep on their pay-
rolls in order to match wage offers made by industries
in more favorable demand situations. Consequently, the
wages Offered in industry j are not only a function Of
the "own" change in product demand, but they are also a
function of the changes in product demand facing other
industries.
An increase in demand for the product produced by
an industry is observable in a decrease in inventories
and/or an increase in product price. The volume of
sales Of an industry is measured in nominal terms. Thus,
a positive change in sales may measure either the drawing
down Of inventories, i.e., an increase in the physical
quantity of output sold, or an increase in the price at
which each unit Of the product is sold. Both situations
indicate to the profit-maizimzing firm that a larger
level of output, and, hence, a larger labor force, would
be desirable. Using sales as a proxy for industry
demand, we specify that the wage firms in industry j
expect to pay the members of occupation q at the beginning
of period t is
A7
* =
(2.31) wqjt wqjt_l + qu(Aslt_l,...,AsMJt_l),
where wqjt—l = wage paid by firms in the jth industry
to members Of occupation q in period t-l;
M3 = number of industries whose sales affect
the wage paid by firms in the jth industry
to members of the qth occupation, léngj;
th_l = sales Of industry j in period t-l; and
ASjt-i = Sjt-l ‘ Sjt-2'
Assuming a given industry composition Of the economy,
aggregation across all industries yields:
(2.32) wét = wqt-l + gq(Aslt—l’°"’ASMt-l) (q=1,...,m).
In this equation, the variable wét
an average of the distribution Of industry expected wage
may be interpreted as
rates and wqt-l as an average of industry wages paid in
the last period.
Worker Expectations.--Turning to the supply side Of
the model, it is simply assumed that workers set their
reservation prices equal to the wage they last earned in
the occupation of their choice. They have every reason
to believe that at this wage they were receiving the
value of their marginal product. Hence, they believe
that other employers will be willing to Offer them the
same wage. This expectation is justified except in a
A8
situation Of a general decrease in demand. In this
case, the worker perceives the necessity of reducing
his reservation price only after he has invested the
time to obtain information on his alternative employ-
l3
ment Opportunities. As a short-run first approxi-
mation, it is assumed that workers expect the wage
structure existing last period to carry over into the
* = =
current period, that is, xqt wqt—l (q l,...,m).
C. Determination of the Vector
Of Expected Unemplpyment
Rates
It is hypothesized that at the beginning Of period
t, an individual adjusts his expectation of the unemploy-
ment rate in the qth occupation in proportion to the
discrepancy in the previous period between the market
determined unemployment rate (u ) and the rate he
qt-l
expected to exist at the beginning of the period (uét-l)
In addition, we assume that the ratio Of the expected
unemployment rate in occupation q to each Of the expected
unemployment rates in the other m-l occupations is
13In his study of unemployed Minnesota workers,
Hirschel Kasper found that for each month Of unemployment,
workers were willing to reduce their reservation prices
by only 0.3 per cent. In fact, Kasper suggests that
workers who have been unemployed less than six months
Often have reservation prices which exceed their former
wages. "The Asking Price of Labor and the Duration Of
Unemployment," Review Of Economics and Statistics,
XLVIV (May, 1967), pp. 165—172. For a summary of this
and other studies Of the time path Of reservation prices
see Holt, Op. cit., pp. 59-65.
A9
determined in the same manner. This hypothesis may be
written as
(2.33) uat - uat-l = (1 _ dq)(uqt-l _ uat_1)’
and
11* 11* u 11*
(2.3A) 3;"; - 1jgizzl ... (1_ 5) ugt-l _ uqt-l
it it-l q it-l It-1
(i=l,...,m;i#q),
where 0<6q qm umt-l ( q) qm+luqt-l
+ e u 0 e u + n 0 n .
q pt q q t 1 qt q qt-l
(2.50) wqt — wqt-l = kq(th - th_l)
_ d
(2.51) th = tat - Aqt (q=1,...,m).
Equations (2.A8) and (2.A9) are already in reduced form.
Eliminating the identities, the system Of equations may
be written in matrix form as follows:
(2.52) fl = K (q=1,...,m),
where B
-_q
and
AH:
|><
I eqt = pqeqt—l qt’
where the aqt's are normally and independently distri-
buted, each with zero mean and common variance 03d,
68
2
that is, NID(0,0qd). Similarly, we assume that nqt
satisfies the first-order autoregressive process
(308) nqt = gqnqt_l + "qt,
where the n 's are NID(0,O2 )
qt qS
One method Of consolidating the wage vector in
equation (3.5) is to retain the own wage and construct
a weighted average Of the other five wage rates. The
Optimal weighting scheme would employ as weights the
marginal rates of technical substitution between the
members of one occupation and the members of each Of
the other occupations. However, in the absence Of
information on the marginal rates Of technical substi—
tution between the broad occupational groups employed
here, it is assumed that I: is a function only Of the
own wage rate in the wage vector, i.e., a =0 (i#q) in
qi
equation (3.5)-
Suppose that the components Of the sales vector
are numbered in the following order: construction, 1;
durable good manufacturing, 2; nondurable good manu-
facturing, 3; wholesale trade, A; retail trade, 5; and
services, 6. The number of arguments in the labor
demand function can also be reduced by constructing‘
summary measures of the sales and change in sales vectors.
Note, however, that the sales variable for the construction
sector is in different units than the sales variables for
69
the other industries; hence, it cannot be included in
a summary measure. Assume that
R A
= _AEE = .932
(3'9) bq2 B U)
are a) a)m E E H h
03-! S—I 0‘4 U30) 4-) 0.)
H0) (00) HQ) 4-354 CU $4
ex ex >x mo L4 O
01p PIP p a mun a) Q
PIC m o O o A O. w
0:?- C03 U13 0023 O Q
Alternative 2 l 6 5 6 3
Occupations 3 3 6 3
6 6 3
With respect to the supply equation for craftsmen
and foremen, one further assumption will be made. The
variable upt is included in the model because the supply
decisions Of secondary workers hinge on the employment
state of the primary wage earner in the family. In view
of the component occupations of craftsmen and foremen
and the fact that most Of these workers are males, it
72
seems likely that the vast majority Of the members of
this occupation are primary wage earners. Hence, the
variable upt will be excluded from this equation.
Consider now any one of the six supply equations,
for example, the equation for laborers which is written
as follows:
~ ~ W
s _ s 6t-l
(3.12) A6t - (1-06)c6O + 56£6t—l + 063 A
w3t—1
O
6t-2 A A
‘ 56063 g + C67W6t_1 ‘ 56067W6t—2
3t-2
+ d (l 5 ) u6t"l + d [(1 5 ) J
63 ‘ 6 63t_l 67 ’ 6 u6t—1
+ e6upt ‘ 66e6upt—1 + n6t ' 56A6t—1'
~s _
Note that u6t—l is a component Of £6t-l by the construc-
tion Of the latter variable (see (3.1)). Consequently,
in what follows, the own lagged unemployment rate is
omitted from each supply equation. The effect of this
omission on the estimated coefficients of the unemploy-
ment rate Of married males is discussed in Chapter IV.
As is usual in distributed lag models, equation
(3.12) is overidentified with respect to certain para-
meters. For example, an estimate of 56 may be Obtained
from an estimate of the coefficient of QEt-ls however,
73
yet another estimate Of 56 may be Obtained from estimates
of the coefficients Of w6t-l/w3t-l and w6t-2/w3t-2'
These two estimates will not, in general, be the same.
In particular, the coefficients of w6t-2/w3t—2’ w6t-2’
are nonlinear in the parameters
/u and u
u6t-1 3t-l’ pt-1
of the model. To estimate the parameters of this
equation, nonlinear restrictions must be placed on each
of these four coefficients (d67=0 by assumption).
Following Zellner g£_al., a nonlinear estimation techni-
que that could be applied is the Gaushaus method.10
An alternative nonlinear technique, which we shall
employ, is described most easily by first rewriting (3.12)
as
~ ~ w
s s _ 6t-l
(3.13) £6t — 6626t“l - (1-66)C60 + C63 A
w3t-1
lw6t-2 A A
‘ 56 Q + 067(W6t-l-56w6t-2)
I 3.-.
(u
6t-1
+ d (1—5 )
63[ 6 u3t_1U
+
86(upt-66upt-1) + n6t
‘ 66"6t-1'
10A. Zellner, D. S. Huang, and L. C. Chau, "Further
Analysis Of the Short-Run Consumption Function with Emphasis
on the Role of Liquid Assets," Econometrica, Vol. 33
(July, 1965),-pp. 571-581.
7A
Equations (3.11) and (3.13) are now expressed in a form
such that unique parameter estimates Of both equations
may be Obtained by single—equation application of ordi-
nary least squares (OLS) for selected values of the
parameters pq and éq, where 0mfi pcmo Loo OH may pm opmm 50pm osmpmgwflo hflpcmOHmficmeo
.Hm>ma pcmo pod m on» pm opmm 509% pcmpmoMHo meQmOHchmHm
Q
.Ho>ma pcoo Loo H map pm opmm Eogm osmpommflo mflpcmOHchwfimm
.mpmoplp ooafimplozp ohm
mpmmp Ham paw mpcmfloflgmmoo opp ZOHmD mommzpcmhma Cw pmmoam mpopho opmocmpmx
Ammo.ov Amwmv Aomsv Ammm.fiav Ammv
memo.o mm.o 5oz- mmm :ss.mfiu mama mumpopmq
Aaao.ov Amaa.mmv Ammm.mav “moo.mmv Ammmv
mmma.o mm.o m:o.oan mzmm.mw mm:.m mmms.m mm>flpmcmao
Aaao.ov Azmmv Ammav “mam.mv Ammav swampom a
mmma.o no.0 mmHH.H- mamm.a mm: momm.m cmempoato
Ammo.ov Amma.fiv Azmm.av Amma.mmo game mtmxpoz
msmo.o mm.o :Hm.H- mmoq.m om:a.mm mmm: moa>pmm
Ammo.ov Ammqv Aoozv Azam.fiav AHOHV mcmxpoz
momfi.o mm.o mmm scam mam. . mmfie mmflmm
Ammo.ov Aozm.mv Ammm.:v “cam.mmv Ammav mp@&toz
mmoa.o mw.o ooma.mu mmom.mm mmm.m mmmw HmOHcmHo
mm Ga ANIwaV Aslwaxv Annmaxv .pmcoo COHpmasooo
,. a m
*.Aa.zv
CH oofimHoon meowpwzom ocmEmo who CH mcfipmoadm
mtmmemcma so mmpasapmm moo-n.m momaw
81
equations and 0.8 in the other four indicates that posi-
tive autocorrelation exists in the eqt's (q=1,...,6).
In addition, each estimate of pq is significant. The
Durbin-Watson statistiasfbr the disturbances e -p 8
qt q qt-l
(q=1,...,6) range from 1.91 to 2.50. This range is well
above the tabulated upper bound for the sample size and
number of explanatory variables. Hence, we do not re—
ject the hypothesis of random disturbances when a first—
“4‘ “‘9 _-..-
2
order autoregressive process is assumed.
For the set of OLS estimates of pq and Sq, the
Zellner procedure described in Chapter III was then
applied to the twelve equation system.3 These Aitken
1-8 2
S; = J— ’
pq n
where n is the sample size. This formula was derived
by Professor J. Kmenta.
2The Durbin—Watson test is derived for the case of
nonstochastic regressors; consequently, if the lagged
dependent variable Rat—l were considered a predetermined
variable whose coeffgcient is to be estimated, the con—
ditions required for use of the Durbin-Watson test would
not be met. However, all the regressors in (4.1) are
nonstochastic so that the Durbin-Watson test is appropriate.
3The OLS estimates of 6 (q=1,...,6) are obtained
in exactly the same way as the estimates of p . They
are discussed in Part B of this section. q
82
estimates of the demand equations are reported in Table 3.
The coefficients of multiple determination were not calcu—
lated for this procedure.
The coefficient estimates obtained by OLS and the
Aitken procedure differ because the data in the sample
are given identical weights equal to unity in the OLS
estimator; whereas, the elements of the inverse of the
variance—covariance matrix are utilized as weights in
the Aitken estimator.
As anticipated, the standard errors reported for
the Aitken procedure in Table 3 are uniformly lower than
the corresponding standard errors reported in Table 2.
This is also the case for the standard errors estimated
for the coefficients of the supply equations (see Tables
u and 5).
In general, the gain in efficiency obtained by
using Zellner's technique is a maximum for a given level
of correlation between contemporaneous disturbances if
the explanatory variables in different equations are un-
correlated. This is clearly not the case in the system
of equations presented here, particularly in that five
of the six supply equations contain the variable up.
However, it is also clear that we obtain a significant
gain in efficiency by using the Aitken estimator.
Turning to the coefficient estimates, the estimates
of the constant terms obtained by both estimation
lmf.
I
3
L.
83
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.Ho>mH pcmo pod m who pm opmN Sosa pcmhmmmfio mapcmofimficwfim
Q
.Hm>ma pcmo pod H onp pm opmm Eopm pcopmmwfio meQmOHchmem
.mpmmunp ooafimpuozp ohm
mpmmp Ham ocm mpcmHOfiwmmoo mg» soamp mommgpcmzmd cfl zmoddm whoppm osmocmpm*
Ammo.ov Ammzv Aomzv Amma.av Ammo
mw.o was: mmam.a mmo.m| mozm whopoowq
Aaao.ov Amflo.afiv Amm:.mv Amsm.aav Aommvr
«0.0 mmH.HHu mmmz.mm mam.ma- azao.m mmsfipmcmao
Asso.ov Aomfiv Ammav Aaqs.:v Ammo swamtom a
mm.o mammn mmmwaa 0:0.H mmmm.m cosmpmmpo
Ammo.ov mamas Ammo.av Aoam.mav Ammo mtmxcoz
mm.o owmm.fil mamm.: mwmm.mm mmom oofl>pmm
Aaoo.ov Ammav “sass Amoo.mv gems mutate;
mm.o float wmow Hum: mmow moamm
Ammo.ov Amm:.mv Aqom.mv Amsm.aflv Amaav mtmxtoz
mm.o mwms.oa- ama:.mm om:.am «mam amoutmao
A -OHXV A -OHXV A -onv
Ga 5 U N U m U .pmsoo coaquSooo
. m m m
*.AH. v CH
omfimfloodm mcofipmsom ocmEmo onp CH wcfipmo
m
gm mpsmHOHoumoo no mmpmsflpmm :mxpfl<--.m mamas
84
techniques are uniformly positive and highly significant.
The lagged indices of industry sales (Eét_l) also per-
formed very strongly. Each of the estimated coefficients
of sét_l is positive as expected, and five of the six OLS
estimates and all of the Aitken estimates are signifi—
cantly different from zero.
The lagged change in sales index (As ) was intro—
qt—l
duced into the model as part of the hypothesis determining
the wage rates expected by employers. The hypothesis
states that the greater is AEét_l,
expected to exist in occupation q in period t. Thus, it
the higher is the wage
is anticipated that the coefficients attached to the
change in sales indices will be negative because the
number of workers desired by firms is specified to be
inversely related to the expected wage rate. This is
the case for five of the six OLS estimates and for each
Aitken estimate. Two of the OLS estimates and three of
the Aitken estimates are significantly different from
zero. More of the estimated coefficients might be ex—
pected to be significant except that variation in Asét_l
very likely has a direct impact on the demand for labor
which partially offsets the indirect effect appearing
via the expected wage.
The performance of the lagged real wage variables
is somewhat disappointing in that only two of the OLS
coefficient estimates and three of the Aitken estimates
85
have the anticipated sign. Both the OLS and Aitken esti—
mates of a3 are positive and significant, while the only
negative estimate approaching significance is the OLS
estimate of a6.
Part of the lack of significance of the lagged
wage variables may be traced to the high correlation be—
tween the wage and sales indices. The existence of multi—
collinearity suggests that reliable estimates of the ef—
fect of changes in wage rates are not obtainable without
utilizing some prior information about the relationship
between the wage and sales variables.
B. The Supply Results
The OLS estimates of the parameters of the six
supply equations, along with the corresponding standard
errors and R2's, are reported in Table u. Table 5 con-
tains the coefficient estimates calculated using the two-
step Aitken procedure.
In all six supply equations, we assume that the
expectations coefficient éq equals the parameter Sq in a
first—order autoregressive process. The parameter Eq is
successively assigned the values 0.1,0.2,...,0.9 in each
equation; the estimates reported in Table 4 minimize the
sum of squares of OLS residuals. Again, there is signifi-
cant positive autocorrelation among the nqt's with
E (=8q) equaling 0.9 in four equations and 0.8 and 0.6
q
in the remaining two equations. Each of these estimates
86
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CONSTRUCTION AND SOURCES OF SAMPLE DATA
The construction of the sample data used in the
regression analysis is described below and a listing of
the data sources follows. Monthly observations were ob-
tained for the period 1958 to 1966. The subscript 3
refers to the Jth industry, J=l,...,6. The six indus-
tries examined in the study are numbered as follows:
construction, 1; durable goods manufacturing, 2; non—
durable goods manufacturing, 3; wholesale trade, H;
retail trade, 5; and services, 6. The subscript q re-
fers to the qth occupational group, q=l,...,6. The six
major occupations considered are: clerical workers, 1;
sales workers, 2; service workers, 3; craftsmen and fore-
men, “; operatives, 5; and laborers, 6. It was decided
to report the empirical results in the text with clerical
workers labeled the first occupation and sales workers the
second. However, in the data fed to the computer, the
order of these two occupations was reversed. Hence, for
example, the data series labeled LDl above is the number
of employed sales workers, while LD2 is the number of
employed clerical workers.
128
202
Q:
129
Number of employed members of the qth occupational
group, thousands of workers.
~d _ =
zq (-LDq) (l)
Unemployment rate in the qth occupational group,
per cent.
uq (=Uq) = (2)
Unemployment rate of married males, per cent.
up (=UP) = (3)
Number of members of occupation q, thousands of
workers.
”8 _ _ (l)
"q (‘st ‘ T7137
Sales of the construction industry.
81 = (4)
Sales of durable goods manufacturing, billions of
dollars.
s2 = (5)
Sales of nondurable goods manufacturing, billions
of dollars.
86:
PI
PI
PI
PI“:
130
Sales of the wholesale trade industry, billions
of dollars.
Su"
(7)
Sales of the retail trade industry, billions of
dollars.
S5
(8)
Sales of the services industry, billions of dollars.
S6:
Price index for
PIl
Price index for
PI2 =
Price index for
1959:100.
PI3
Price index for
1959:100.
PIN =
(9)
the construction industry, 1959:100.
(10)
durable goods manufacturing, 1959:100.
(11)
nondurable goods manufacturing,
(12)
the wholesale trade industry,
(13)
PI
PI6:
CPI:
AI
AI
AI“:
AI
131
Price index for the retail trade industry, 1959:100.
P15 = (1“)
Price index for the services industry, 1959:100.
P16 = (15)
Consumer price index, 1959:100.
CPI = (16)
Change in inventories of durable goods manu-
facturing, billions of dollars.
A12 = (17)
Change in inventories of nondurable goods manu-
facturing, billions of dollars.
A13 = (18)
Change in inventories for the wholesale trade
industry, billions of dollars.
AI“ = (19)
Change in inventories for the retail trade industry,
billions of dollars.
AI5 = (20)
Ya:
Y6:
132
Output of the construction industry, billions of
dollars.
_ (4)
yl ' Tic?
Output of durable goods manufacturing, billions
of dollars.
= (5)4-(17)
y2 (lI)
Output of nondurable goods manufacturing, billions
of dollars.
= (6) + (18)
y3 (12f
Output of the wholesale trade industry, billions
of dollars.
= (7) + (19)
yu (13)
Output of the retail trade industry, billions of
dollars.
_ (8) + (20)
y5 ' (in)
Output of the services industry, billions of
dollars.
_ (9)
y6 ' TT§T
2
mI
>
0..
QJ
.Q
133
'8: Number of members of occupation q employed by
industry J in the base period, 1959.
1 . = 21
QJB ( )
qu: Wage paid to the members of occupation q by in-
dustry j in the base period, dollars.
w . = 22
qJB ( )
Wage paid in the Jth industry, dollars.
Wj = (23)
Weighted average of the sales of industries
employing members of occupation q.
6 2
's' (=3Hq) = z (.9153
q 3:2 ij J
Estimate of the real wage in the qth occupation
facing employers, dollars.
6 k W
z _ng. ] w
i=1 yJB PI; IJB QJB
W
a: (=EHQ) = 6 ‘z 33
z _Ql§
J=l yJB
)
l3“
Estimate of the real wage in the qth occupation
facing labor suppliers, dollars.
(1)
(2)
(3)
(A)
(5)-(8)
§[“qJB WJ w J ‘
i=1 5'38 WJB CUB
1 9. 1
Z Ly' BA
AS _ \ = 11:]. JB
Wq (‘WHq’ CPI
Seasonally adjusted employment of the members
of the qth occupational group, thousands of
workers.
Bureau of Labor Statistics, Employment and
Earnings and Monthly Report on the Labor Force,
vol. 1“ (July, 1967), pp. 107—110.
Seasonally adjusted unemployment rate in the
qth occupational group, per cent.
Bureau of Labor Statistics, Employment and
Earnings and Monthly Report on the Labor Force,
Vol. 1“ (July, 1967), pp. 114-115.
Seasonally adjusted unemployment rate of married
men, per cent.
Bureau of Labor Statistics, Employment and
Earnings and Monthly Report on the Labor Force.
F. W. Dodge Company seasonally adjusted index
of the value of construction contracts in 48
states, 1957-59leO. In the construction of
the output measure for the industry, the value
of new construction put-in-place (seasonally
adjusted), billions of dollars, is utilized.
Ofgice of Business Economics, Business Statistics,
19 7.
Seasonally adjusted business sales of the jth
industry (j=2,...,5), billions of dollars.
Ofgice of Business Economics, Business Statistics,
l9 7.
I I II. ..II I‘
(9)
(10)
(ll)—(12)
(13)
(14)
(15)
(16)
(17)-(20)
(21)
135
Seasonally adjusted final sales of services
in GNP by major type (monthly rates), billions
of dollars.
Office of Business Economics, Business Statis—
tics, 1967.
Department of Commerce Composite Construction
Cost Index, 1959:100.
Office of Business Economics, Business
Statistics, 1967.
Wholesale price index--manufacturers, 1959:100.
Office of Business Economics, Business
Statistics, 1967.
Wholesale price index--all commodities, 1959:
100.
Office of Business Economics, Business
Statistics, 1967.
Consumer price index--commodities, 1959:100.
Office of Business Economics, Business
Statistics, 1967.
Consumer price index-~services, 1959:100.
Office of Business Economics, Business
Statistics, 1967.
Consumer price index—-all items, 1959:100.
Office of Business Economics, Business
Statistics, 1967.
First difference of the end of period book
value of manufacturing and trade inventories
for the jth industry (j=2,...,5), billions
of dollars.
Office of Business Economics, Business
Statistics, 1967.
Major occupational group of employed persons
by major industry group, 1959, number of workers.
Bureau of the Census, U. 8. Census of POpu-
lation: 1960, Subject Reports, Occupation by
Industry, Table l.
(22)
(23)
136
Median earnings of males who worked 50 to 52
weeks in 1959, by occupational groups, dollars.
Bureau of the Census, U. S. Census of Popu-
lation: 1960, Subject Reports, Occupational
CharacteristiCs, Table 30.
Average weekly earnings in the jth industry,
dollars. For the services industry, total
employees in the current period relative to
the base period was used as a proxy for
relative earnings.
Bureau of Labor Statistics, Emplpyment and
Earnings Statistics for the United States-—
190941967, Bulletin No. 1312-5.
BIBLIOGRAPHY
SELECTED BIBLIOGRAPHY
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Cain, Glen G. Married Women in the Labor Force: An
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Goldberger, Arthur S. Econometric Theory. New York:
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Johnston, J. Econometric Methods. New York:
McGraw-
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Barth, Peter S.
"Unemployment and Labor Force Partici-
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Behman, Sara. "Wage—Determination Process in U. S.
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Benewitz, Maurice C., and Zucker, Albert. "Human Capital
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138
139
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Parks, Richard W. "Efficient Estimation of a System of
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”'WIIIIHIIMI\(Willi\m'fufiuim‘s
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