Monthly Archive for November, 2008

Updated draft of geographic mobility paper posted

I posted a revised version of my paper on the cyclical bias of geographic mobility, “A Longitudinal Analysis of the Current Population Survey: Assessing the Cyclical Bias of Geographic Mobility.” You can download the paper from my research page or directly by clicking on the title. Here is the abstract:

This paper assesses the implications of geographic mobility for the measurement of U.S. labor market dynamics using the Current Population Survey (CPS). Because the CPS does not follow individuals that move, estimates may be biased if the labor market behavior of movers differs systematically from that of nonmovers. I create a new database, the Longitudinal Population Database (LPD), that utilizes all longitudinal information in the CPS to form a panel data set. I use the LPD to identify persons who move and therewith estimate a bound on the bias from geographic mobility. I find that the cyclical bias arising from geographic mobility is small. At business cycle frequencies, the difference between the separation hazard rate calculated from the entire CPS sample and from a subset that are known not to have moved never exceeds 4 percent. There is little effect of mobility on the job finding hazard rate. I conclude that geographic mobility does not significantly affect CPS labor market dynamics.

Problem set 3

I just noticed that problem set 3 did not post to the course web page on Friday. It is now posted. Solutions will be posted during week 10.

Change of office hours this week

I have to move my office hours this week to Thu (11/20) 1:00-3:00p. As always I will be in 103 Marshall College. My office hours will return to their regular time next week.

Updated job market paper posted

I posted a revised version of my job market, “Understanding Unemployment Dynamics: The Role of Time Aggregation.” Here is the abstract:

This paper uses weekly data from the Survey of Income and Program Participation (SIPP) to estimate the role of time aggregation in measuring gross labor force flows and unemployment dynamics. Time aggregation is substantial: gross flows estimated from monthly data understate the true number of transitions by 15–24 percent. Time aggregation in both separations to unemployment and accessions from unemployment comoves positively with the business cycle. The effect from time aggregation on separations is roughly offset by its effect on accessions, however, creating no meaningful cyclical bias in measured gross flows or hazard rates. Contrary to claims by Hall (2006) and Shimer (2007), separation hazard rates calculated from the SIPP and the Current Population Survey are strongly countercyclical and remain so after adjusting for time aggregation. In addition, the separation hazard rate contributes fully one-half of the cyclical variance of the steady-state unemployment rate after adjusting for time aggregation.