Directed search, wages, and non- wage amenities: evidence from an online job board
Escudero, Verónica ; Liepmann, Hannah ; Vergara, Damián
ILO - Geneva
2025
96 p.
wages ; minimum wage ; job searching ; job vacancy ; posted worker
Working Paper
136
Employment
https://doi.org/10.54394/YWML9238
English
Bibliogr.
"This paper investigates how job seekers in Uruguay direct their search based on posted wages and non-wage amenities, using online job board data. It examines occupational differences in application behavior and tests these patterns with a quasi-experimental approach leveraging industry-by-occupation minimum wage variations.
We leverage rich data from a prominent online job board in Uruguay to assess directed search patterns in job applications, focusing on posted wages and advertised non-wage amenities. We find robust evidence of directed search based on posted wages in the cross-section, with stark heterogeneity by occupation: the wage-application correlation is driven by vacancies attached to lower-skill occupations, with applications to vacancies attached to higher-skill occupations showing no responsiveness to posted wages. By applying text analysis to the job ads, we elicit advertised non-wage amenities and find evidence of directed search based on non-wage amenities. Applications to vacancies attached to lower-skill occupations are consistent with lexicographic application preferences: amenities predict applications to these vacancies only when wages are not posted. Finally, we exploit industry-by-occupation minimum wage variation to demonstrate that the observed occupational heterogeneity in directed search patterns is supported by quasi-experimental difference-in-differences estimates of the impact of wages on job applications."
Digital
ISBN (PDF) : 9789220413937
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