As has become apparent, the recovery
in the American job market since the end of the Great Recession has been much
different than in the past. One of the key differences this time has been
the elevated numbers of Americans that have been unemployed for the long-term (over six months) as shown on this graph:
The economy is nearly five years out
of the last recession and the number of long-term unemployed workers is still
nearly twice the level seen after the end of the 1991 and 2001 recessions.
The continuing level of high long-term unemployment is puzzling, particularly
given that, as shown here, the number of job openings has increased
substantially and is nearly at the same level that it was at before the
glutinous brown matter hit the rotating cooling device:
Obviously, the elevated level of
long-term unemployment has long outlived its original causes.
A paper, "The JoblessTrap" by Rand Ghayad examines what it is like to be one of America's
long-term unemployed undertaking a job search. The author uses a resume audit study in which he
explores the extent to which employers forgive long periods of unemployment
even when the applicant's merits appear to be strong because they've worked in
the same type of firm as the prospective employer according to their resume.
The resumes were constructed to represent young applicants with six
years of work experience after college. By manipulating the length of
time spent out-of-work and the relevancy of prior industry experience, the
author is able to test the response of potential employers. To complete
his research, the author sent out 3360 fictitious resumes to 600 job ads in the
financial activities, wholesale and retail trade, professional and business
services and education and health services industries.
Here are the findings of his study. The number of interview requests per
month drops as the months of unemployment pass, particularly sharply after six
months of non-employment for both matching and non-relevant experience as shown
on this graph:
Here is a graph showing the
interview request rate for workers with matching and non-matching experience over time:
Note that the non-employed
applicants with relevant industry experience have a substantially higher
interview request rate for the first six months of unemployment. You'll
also notice that the candidates with matching experience see a drop off in the
rate of interview requests after 6 months of unemployment and that by 7 months
of unemployment (i.e. as the unemployed worker is officially long-term unemployed), the interview rate for both qualified and less qualified types
of candidates are virtually identical, suggesting that the experience premium
has completely dissipated.
In the case where the applicant has
matching experience and is employed, on average, 14.66 percent of employed
applicants received an interview request. By comparison, on average,
10.09 percent of non employed applicants received an interview request.
In the case where there was no relevant experience, an average of only
5.83 percent of employed workers received an interview request compared to an average
of only 4.35 percent of unemployed workers. Short-term unemployed workers
with same industry experience had a 16.11 percent interview request rate
compared to 8.33 percent for those applicants with different industry
experience. The situation for long-term unemployed workers was far
different; long-term unemployed workers with same industry experience had only
a 1.94 percent interview request rate compared to a measly 0.56 precent rate
for those applicants with different industry experience.
This analysis shows that employers
strongly discriminate against long-term unemployed workers with related
industry experience far more than their apparently less qualified peers as time passes.
Once six months of unemployment passes and workers officially become
long-term unemployed, the chances of getting an interview is essentially the
same for candidates with both relevant experience and those with no relevant
experience. It appears that firms adjust their screening thresholds to
avoid the chances of hiring what they believe to be a low productivity worker,
even though that worker has relevant experience and is less likely to use
company resources for training.
America's long-term unemployed are
caught in a trap. The longer that they are unemployed, the more likely it
is that they will remain unemployed for even longer since the odds that they
will get an interview request decline to near zero as the months pass even if they have relevant experience that might benefit a potential employer. Even as the economy creates a growing number of job openings, America's
long-term unemployed are unlikely to benefit.
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