Youth Unemployment, Labor Market Transitions, and Scarring : Evidence from Bosnia and Herzegovina, 2001-04
Relatively little is known about youth unemployment and its lasting consequences in transition economies, despite the difficult labor market adjustment experienced by these countries over the past decade. The authors examine early unemployment spel...
Main Authors: | , |
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Language: | English |
Published: |
World Bank, Washington, DC
2012
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Subjects: | |
Online Access: | http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2007/04/7491146/youth-unemployment-labor-market-transitions-scarring-evidence-bosnia-herzegovina-2001-04 http://hdl.handle.net/10986/7010 |
Summary: | Relatively little is known about youth
unemployment and its lasting consequences in transition
economies, despite the difficult labor market adjustment
experienced by these countries over the past decade. The
authors examine early unemployment spells and their
longer-term effects among the youth in Bosnia and
Herzegovina (BiH), where the labor market transition is made
more difficult by the challenges of a post-conflict
environment. They use panel data covering up to 4,800
working-age individuals over the 2001 to 2004 period. There
are three main findings from their analysis. First, youth
unemployment is high-about twice the national
average-consistent with recent findings from the BiH labor
market study. Younger workers are more likely to go into
inactivity or unemployment and are also less likely to
transition out of inactivity, holding other things constant.
Second, initial spells of unemployment or joblessness appear
to have lasting adverse effects on earnings and employment
("scarring"). But there is no evidence that the
youth are at a greater risk of scarring, or suffer
disproportionately worse outcomes from initial joblessness,
compared with other age groups. Third, higher educational
attainment is generally associated with more favorable labor
market outcomes. Skilled workers are less likely to be
jobless and are less likely to transition from employment
into joblessness. But there is evidence that the penalty
from jobless spells may also be higher for more educated
workers. The authors speculate that this may be due in part
to signaling or stigma, consistent with previous findings in
the literature. |
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