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Expected Changes in the Workforce and Implications for Labor Markets

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Abstract

[Excerpt] While many have written about possible effects of the baby boom on the U.S. economy, few have recognized that this demographic transition provides analysts with a unique and valuable opportunity to investigate how the labor market works. Specifically, as baby boomers move up the age distribution, they impart a one-time shock to the supply of potential workers in each age bracket. Because this change is exogenous, many of the tools labor economists typically apply can be utilized to predict how the aging of the baby boom will alter key labor market outcomes. Theoretical and empirical models which (either implicitly or explicitly) hold constant structural parameters in order to work through the effects of an exogenous shock are well-suited to address this issue.

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Sponsorship

Date Issued

1991-06-01

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Keywords

CAHRS; ILR; center; human resource; job; worker; advanced; labor market; satisfaction; employee; work; manage; management; health insurance; flexible benefits; benefits; firms; program; compensation; age; gender; salary; marital status; labor economics; premium

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Employer

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Government Document

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preprint

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