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Time preferences and career investments

Thomas van Huizen, +1 more
- 01 Aug 2015 - 
- Vol. 35, pp 77-92
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TLDR
In this article, the authors examined the role of time preferences in career investments and found that on-the-job search and work effort increase with patience, whereas the relation between job mobility is more ambiguous.
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This article is published in Labour Economics.The article was published on 2015-08-01 and is currently open access. It has received 10 citations till now. The article focuses on the topics: Promotion (rank).

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Job Mobility and Earnings Over the Life Cycle

TL;DR: The authors analyzes the effects of job mobility on earnings both at young and at older ages, taking into account the discontinuity of earnings across jobs, the decline of human capital investment within the job and over the life cycle, and the effect of mobility on the slope of the earnings profile.
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Are cities losing their vitality? Exploring human capital in Chinese cities

TL;DR: Wang et al. as mentioned in this paper proposed an alternative indicator, average human capital (HC), to investigate city vitality, which relaxes the traditional assumption that HC has a linear relation with schooling, and combine inputs with outputs of HC by considering the heterogeneity of returns to schooling of each city.
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Time preferences and their life outcome correlates: Evidence from a representative survey.

TL;DR: With the exception of unemployment, a consistent and often significant positive relationship between patience and the corresponding domain is documented, with the strongest associations in educational attainment, wealth and financial decisions.
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Risk Aversion and Job Mobility

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors examined the relation between risk aversion and job mobility and found that risk averse workers are less likely to move to other jobs and that the negative relation between job acceptance is driven by the job acceptance rather than the search effort decision.
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Career incentive contract design in project management under companies’ competition and asymmetric information

TL;DR: An agency problem with two companies competing over a menu of career incentive contracts for a manager, it is confirmed that it is unnecessary to provide career incentives under full information regardless of whether competition exists, and recommendations on mitigating the adverse impacts caused by competition and asymmetric information are provided.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Job Search and Hyperbolic Discounting: Structural Estimation and Policy Evaluation*

TL;DR: In this article, the structural parameters of a job search model with hyperbolic discounting and endogenous search effort are estimated using data on unemployment spells and accepted wages from the National Longitudinal Survey of Youth (NLSY).
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On-the-job search, productivity shocks, and the individual earnings process*

TL;DR: In this article, the authors investigate the capacity of a structural job search model with productivity shocks to replicate salient properties of these dynamics, such as the covariance structure of earnings, the evolution of individual earnings mean and variance with the duration of uninterrupted employment, or the distribution of year-to-year earnings changes.
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Human Capital and the Lifetime Costs of Impatience

TL;DR: This paper examined the role of impatience in the formation of human capital and found that impatient people systematically acquire lower levels of multiple measures of human resources and that a substantial fraction of these differences arise from dynamically inconsistent behavior, such as starting an educational program but failing to complete it.
Journal ArticleDOI

Psychological and biological foundations of time preference

TL;DR: This paper examined the relationship between the economic concept of time preference and relevant concepts from psychology and biology and found that financial discounting is related to a range of psychological variables including consideration of future consequences, self-control, conscientiousness, extraversion, and experiential avoidance.
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Frequently Asked Questions (9)
Q1. What contributions have the authors mentioned in the paper "Time preferences and career investments" ?

In this paper, the authors examined how time preferences are related to career investments and thereby shape the individual 's career path. 

A potential explanation for this inconsistency is that the authors use a different patience measure: whereas previous studies rely on behavioural proxies ( e. g., smoking and alcohol consumption ), they exploit a battery of items indicating the individual ’ s orientation towards the future. The authors test this explanation by re-estimating their models using a patience measure based on behavioural proxies. Future research could exploit more general ( self-assessed ) psychological constructs such as the CFC scale. The results complement recent findings in economics showing that time preferences predict the individual ’ s income level ( Golsteyn et al., 2014 ; Cadena and Keys, forthcoming ), suggesting observed income inequality can to some extent be explained by heterogeneity in the discount rate. 

Answering advertisements, directly contacting employers and asking friends and relatives are frequentlyused job search methods as well. 

A higher level of search effort results in a positive effect on the job arrival rate,whereas an increase in the level of work effort generates a negative effect on thejob acceptance rate (1 − F(ŵ)). 

Cadena and Keys (forthcoming) also demonstrate that impatience is negatively related to school performance and thereby depresses lifetime income: the earnings gap between ‘impatient’ and ‘patient’ individuals is over $75.000 by the time they reach middle age. 

The rationale is that workers who just (re)entered the labour market may have rather distinctive job search behaviour, as they may for instance accept a job that they perceive as temporary. 

Although promotions and job mobility are typically studied in isolation, recent literature stresses that on-the-job search may play an important role in the wage formation of workers staying in the firm (e.g., Cahuc et al., 2006; Postel-Vinay and Turon, 2010; Moen and Rosen, 2013). 

Themodel shows that patience increases work and search effort (at least within a certain range of the discount rate), but that the relation with mobility is ambiguous. 

The authors estimate the relation between time preferences and search effort using different estimation methods: the equations using search attitude and a dummy indicating whether the worker applied for another job as the dependent variable are estimated by ordered probit and binary probit, respectively. 

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