The Utilization of U.S. Male Labor, 1975-1992: Estimates of Foregone Hours
Lawrence Buron,
Robert H. Haveman and
Owen O'Donnell Additional contact information Lawrence Buron: The Jerome Levy Economics Institute
Owen O'Donnell: The Jerome Levy Economics Institute
Abstract:
In this working paper, Lawrence Buron, Robert Haveman, and Owen O'Donnell examine the possible reasons for the underutilization of labor among various segments of the male work force by studying foregone hours, or the gap (in terms of hours) between the amount of time actually worked and full-time hours. The authors contend that although the number of annual hours worked follows the business cycle, there has been no recovery from the decline that occurred in the recession of the early 1980s. This trend has been overlooked because the average number of hours worked has remained fairly constant—at 2,080 hours, the number of hours required to be counted as a full-time worker—over the period. The distribution of hours among workers, however, has shifted. The authors hoped to determine which workers were affected and whether the decline in hours was voluntary or involuntary. The authors used from the March Consumer Population Survey on full-time, full-year (FTFY) employment among males for the years 1975-1993, and reported the actual trends in each of the measures employed, as well as for standardized measures that held the age, educational, and racial composition of the labor force constant (at their initial year levels). By doing so, they were better able to determine whether the trends they found were the result of demographic changes or influenced by other events.
JEL-codes:E (search for similar items in EconPapers) Date: 1999-04-14 Note: Type of Document - Acrobat PDF; prepared on IBM PC; to print on PostScript; pages: 52; figures: included