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Job Mobility and the Careers of Young Men

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TLDR
This paper studied the joint processes of job mobility and wage growth among young men drawn from the Longitudinal Employee-Employer Data and concluded that the process of job changing for young workers, while apparently haphazard, is a critical component of workers' move toward the stable employment relations that characterize mature careers.
Abstract
We study the joint processes of job mobility and wage growth among young men drawn from the Longitudinal Employee-Employer Data. Following individuals at three month intervals from their entry into the labor market, we track career patterns of job changing and the evolution of wages for up to 15 years. Following an initial period of weak attachment to both the labor force and particular employers, careers tend to stabilize in the sense of strong labor force attachment and increasing durability of jobs. During the first 10 years in the labor market, a typical young worker will work for seven employers, which accounts for about two-thirds of the total number of jobs he will hold in his career. The evolution of wages plays a key role in this transition to stable employment: we estimate that wage gains at job changes account for at least a third of early-career wage growth, and that the wage is the key determinant of job changing decisions among young workers. We conclude that the process of job changing for young workers, while apparently haphazard, is a critical component of workers' move toward the stable employment relations that characterize mature careers.

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The effect of worker mobility on compensating wages for earnings risk

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Explaining the Gender Wage Gap: Estimates from a Dynamic Model of Job Changes and Hours Changes

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Within- and Cross-Firm Mobility and Earnings Growth

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International research visits and careers: An analysis of bioscience academics in Japan

TL;DR: In this article, the authors investigated the effect of international research visits on promotion and found that such visits may help to expand existing networks and promote knowledge transfer while ensuring career stability, identified as the main barrier to mobility in Europe and Japan.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Information and Consumer Behavior

TL;DR: In this article, the authors argue that consumers lack full information about the prices of goods, but their information is probably poorer about the quality variation of products simply because the latter information is more difficult to obtain.
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Job Matching and the Theory of Turnover

TL;DR: Turnover is generated by the existence of a nondegenerate distribution of the worker's productivity across different jobs as discussed by the authors, caused by the assumed variation in the quality of the employee-employer match.
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