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Too rich to do the dirty work? Wealth effects on the demand for good jobs

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Haywood, Luke

Deutsches Institut für Wirtschaftsforschung, Berlin

DIW - Berlin

2014

43 p.

job satisfaction ; labour supply ; wages

United Kingdom

Discussion Papers

1355

Personnel management

www.diw.de/

English

Bibliogr.

"Jobs offer different wages and different non-monetary working conditions. This paper investigates how the demand for non-monetary aspects evolves over changing wealth levels. Wages do not perfectly compensate individuals for differential utility of jobs in a labour market with informational frictions. Changes in wealth may then affect preferences for different jobs. Willingness to pay for non-monetary aspects of jobs (measured by job satisfaction for work "in itself") is found to increase with wealth shocks. Duration models are estimated based on the reduced form of a search model. Wealth may play an important role in labour market choices."

Digital



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