cover image: The Dynamic Effects of Local Labor Market Shocks on Small Firms in The United States

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The Dynamic Effects of Local Labor Market Shocks on Small Firms in The United States

22 Mar 2024

We use payroll data on over 1 million workers at 80,000 small firms to construct county-month measures of employment, hours, and wages that correct for dynamic changes in sample composition in response to business cycle fluctuations. We use this to estimate the response of small firms' employment, hours and wages following tighter local labor market conditions. We find that employment and hours per worker fall and wages rise. This is consistent with the predictions of the response to a demand shock in the well-known “jobs ladder” model of labor markets. To check this interpretation, we show our results hold when instrumenting for local demand using county-level Department of Defense contract spending. Correction for dynamic sample bias is important -- without it, the hours fall by only one third as much and wages increase by double.

Authors

Philip Barrett, Sophia Chen, Li Lin, Anke Weber

Format
Paper
Frequency
regular
ISBN
9798400268649
ISSN
1018-5941
Pages
51
Published in
United States of America
Series
Working Paper No. 2024/063
StockNumber
WPIEA2024063