The Role of Referrals in Immobility, Inequality, and Inefficiency in Labor Markets
Lukas Bolte,
Nicole Immorlica and
Matthew Jackson
Papers from arXiv.org
Abstract:
We study the consequences of job markets' heavy reliance on referrals. Referrals screen candidates and lead to better matches and increased productivity, but disadvantage job-seekers who have few or no connections to employed workers, leading to increased inequality. Coupled with homophily, referrals also lead to immobility: a demographic group's low current employment rate leads that group to have relatively low future employment as well. We identify conditions under which distributing referrals more evenly across a population not only reduces inequality, but also improves future productivity and economic mobility. We use the model to examine optimal policies, showing that one-time affirmative action policies involve short-run production losses, but lead to long-term improvements in equality, mobility, and productivity due to induced changes in future referrals. We also examine how the possibility of firing workers changes the effects of referrals.
Date: 2020-12
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Persistent link: https://EconPapers.repec.org/RePEc:arx:papers:2012.15753
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