TY - GEN AB - Job loss has a permanent negative effect on life-time earnings and, in general, on labor market outcomes of workers. This negative effect is larger if job loss happens in recession than the case of job loss during expansion. In this paper, using linked employer--employee data of Germany from 1975 to 2014, I show that about $55\%$ of the variation in earning loss is accounted for by negative sectoral performance. Intuitively, earning losses associated with job loss are greater during recessions, because the average displaced worker in a recession comes from an industry with poor performance relative to the average industry which makes sector-specific skills less valuable. In other words, recessions are not only periods of more job loss but also periods with more sectors of very poor performance. Hence, workers displaced in recessions are, on average, more likely to struggle with lack of demand for their skills. By building a model of sector-specific human capital, it is shown how loss of sector-specific human capital can explain huge and persistent earning and wage loss of displaced workers. In addition, it is shown that concentration of displaced workers in severely declining sectors during recessions is a potential explanation for larger earning loss in recessions than job-losses in expansions. AD - University of Chicago AU - Joshaghani, Hosein DA - 2017-06 DO - 10.6082/uchicago.1323 DO - doi ED - Steven J. Davis ED - Robert Shimer ED - Amir Kermani ID - 1323 KW - Economics KW - Labor economics KW - Business Cycle KW - Displacement KW - Job loss KW - Sector-Specific Human Captial KW - Wage loss L1 - https://knowledge.uchicago.edu/record/1323/files/Joshaghani_uchicago_0330D_13628.pdf L2 - https://knowledge.uchicago.edu/record/1323/files/Joshaghani_uchicago_0330D_13628.pdf L4 - https://knowledge.uchicago.edu/record/1323/files/Joshaghani_uchicago_0330D_13628.pdf LA - eng LK - https://knowledge.uchicago.edu/record/1323/files/Joshaghani_uchicago_0330D_13628.pdf N2 - Job loss has a permanent negative effect on life-time earnings and, in general, on labor market outcomes of workers. This negative effect is larger if job loss happens in recession than the case of job loss during expansion. In this paper, using linked employer--employee data of Germany from 1975 to 2014, I show that about $55\%$ of the variation in earning loss is accounted for by negative sectoral performance. Intuitively, earning losses associated with job loss are greater during recessions, because the average displaced worker in a recession comes from an industry with poor performance relative to the average industry which makes sector-specific skills less valuable. In other words, recessions are not only periods of more job loss but also periods with more sectors of very poor performance. Hence, workers displaced in recessions are, on average, more likely to struggle with lack of demand for their skills. By building a model of sector-specific human capital, it is shown how loss of sector-specific human capital can explain huge and persistent earning and wage loss of displaced workers. In addition, it is shown that concentration of displaced workers in severely declining sectors during recessions is a potential explanation for larger earning loss in recessions than job-losses in expansions. PB - University of Chicago PY - 2017-06 T1 - Sector-Specific Human Capital and the Effects of Job Displacement TI - Sector-Specific Human Capital and the Effects of Job Displacement UR - https://knowledge.uchicago.edu/record/1323/files/Joshaghani_uchicago_0330D_13628.pdf Y1 - 2017-06 ER -