Biased expectations and labor market outcomes: Evidence from German survey data and implications for the East-West wage gap
Almut Balleer,
Georg Duernecker,
Susanne Forstner and
Johannes Goensch
No 18005, CEPR Discussion Papers from Centre for Economic Policy Research
Abstract:
We measure individual bias in labor market expectations in German survey data and find that workers on average significantly overestimate their individual probabilities to separate from their job when employed as well to find a job when unemployed. These biases vary significantly between population groups. Most notably, East Germans are significantly more pessimistic than West Germans. We find a significantly negative relationship between the pessimistic bias in job separation expectations and wages, and a significantly positive relationship between optimistic bias in job finding expectations and reservation incomes. We interpret and quantify the effects of (such) expectation biases on the labor market equilibrium in a search and matching model of the labor market. Removing the biases could substantially increase wages and expected lifetime income in East Germany. The bias difference in labor market expectations explains part of the East-West German wage gap.
JEL-codes: D84 E24 J31 (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2023-03
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Working Paper: Biased expectations and labor market outcomes: Evidence from German survey data and implications for the East-West wage gap (2024) 
Working Paper: Biased Expectations and Labor Market Outcomes: Evidence from German Survey Data and Implications for the East-West Wage Gap (2023) 
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