Macroeconomics: Employment | 2019

Occupational Mobility and Lifetime Earnings

 
 

Abstract


People s occupations have a significant amount of information about their wages. However, because people - especially young workers - go through multiple occupations and employment statuses during their working lives, we find that their occupations at a young age do not predict their lifetime earnings well. When educational attainment and gender are considered, we find that across education-gender groups the differences in lifetime earnings are even larger than the differences in average occupational wages: Workers in high-wage education-gender groups (men with college degrees, for example) work more (at the extensive margin) and are more likely to have higher-paying occupations.

Volume None
Pages None
DOI 10.20955/r.101.231-44
Language English
Journal Macroeconomics: Employment

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