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Title: Market Conditions and Worker Training: How Does It Affect and Whom?
Resulting in 1 citation.
1. Majumdar, Sumon
Market Conditions and Worker Training: How Does It Affect and Whom?
Labour Economics 14,1 (January 2007): 1-23.
Also: http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0927537105000412
Cohort(s): NLSY79
Publisher: Elsevier
Keyword(s): Human Capital; Occupational Choice; Training; Training, On-the-Job; Wage Differentials

This paper analyses the impact of labor market conditions on a firm's incentive to train its workers. In an equilibrium model of the labor market in which firms use both untrained and in-house-trained workers, we show that the incidence of training increases with the tightness of the labor market. In a multi-sector framework, the usual threat of hold-up by a trained worker is more severe for workers who change their sector of work; during downturns, this serves to bias firms' incentives in imparting training away from such workers and towards workers already in the firm and those new workers coming from the same sector. Evidence from the NLSY confirms both predictions--the incidence and duration of company-sponsored training is adversely affected by higher unemployment rates; furthermore, this negative effect is much stronger for workers who change industries as compared to those who do not.
Bibliography Citation
Majumdar, Sumon. "Market Conditions and Worker Training: How Does It Affect and Whom? ." Labour Economics 14,1 (January 2007): 1-23.