609 research outputs found
Is longer unemployment rewarded with longer job tenure?
This paper examines whether or not a prolonged unemployment period can raise the quality of job matching after unemployment. We focus on job tenure as an indicator of a good quality job match after unemployment. We match two sets of Japanese administrative data compiled by the public employment security offices: one includes information about the circumstances of job seekers receiving unemployment insurance, and the other includes information about job seekers applying for jobs. We first show a negative relationship between unemployment duration and the subsequent job duration. Restricting the sample to job seekers who lower their reservation wage in the final 59 days before expiration of unemployment insurance, we secondly show an even greater negative effect of unemployment duration on the following job duration. The importance lies not only in the duration of unemployment. If job seekers keep a high reservation wage because of the benefits of unemployment insurance, and lower it in response to the expiration of insurance, prolonged unemployment will result in short job duration after unemployment.job search, quality of job match, unemployment duration, unemployment insurance
Opto-Acoustic Technique for Residual Stress Analysis
Residual stress analysis based on co-application of acoustic and optical techniques is discussed. Residual stress analysis is a long-standing and challenging problem in many fields of engineering. The fundamental complexity of the problem lies in the fact that a residual stress is locked into the material and therefore hidden inside the specimen. Thus, direct measurement of residual stress in a completely nondestructive fashion is especially difficult. One possible solution is to estimate residual stress from the change in the elastic constant of the material. Residual stress alters the interatomic distance significantly large that the elastic constant is considerably different from the nominal value. From the change in the elastic constant and knowledge of the interatomic potential, it is possible to estimate the residual stress. This acoustic technique (acoustoelasticity) evaluates the elastic modulus of the specimen via acoustic velocity measurement. It is capable of determining the elastic modulus absolutely, but it is a single-point measurement. The optical technique (electronic speckle pattern interferometry, ESPI) yields full-field, two-dimensional strain maps, but it requires an external load to the specimen. Co-application of the two techniques compensates each other’s shortfalls
The Effect of Extended Unemployment Benefit on the Job Finding Hazards: A Quasi-Experiment in Japan
This paper studies how changes in extended unemployment insurance (UI) benefit affect the duration of unemployment. We investigate this question by exploiting not only strict age thresholds but also the pre-displacement tenure and the reason for separation from the previous job in the Japanese UI system which determines a worker's maximum potential UI benefit duration at the age of 45. Job-seekers who became unemployed due to exogenous reasons (such as establishment closure) at the age threshold of 45 who have longer pre-displacement tenure receive maximum benefits for longer durations. This rule creates a local randomized experiment. Using a large administrative dataset to implement a difference-in-differences approach for the narrow age range of 44-46 who entered unemployment in the same month in the same year, we find that longer maximum benefit durations do not lead to a decrease in the jobless hazard; the duration of unemployment is not prolonged among jobseekers who have longer maximum benefit duration. This result is robust to shorter and longer tenure before entering unemployment. The non-negative effect on the jobless hazard is primarily due to a small difference in maximum duration between the treated group and the control group. In addition, workers with firm-specificity are likely to take any job in difficult position. Since the disincentive effects of UI benefit is weaker among UI recipients with firm-specific human capital, the results suggest that extending UI benefit of prime-age job-seekers with longer tenure at previous job is an effective tool to enhance welfare
Is longer unemployment rewarded with longer job tenure?
This paper examines whether or not a prolonged unemployment period can raise the quality of job matching after unemployment. We focus on job tenure as an indicator of a good quality job match after unemployment. We match two sets of Japanese administrative data compiled by the public employment security offices: one includes information about the circumstances of job seekers receiving unemployment insurance, and the other includes information about job seekers applying for jobs. We first show a negative relationship between unemployment duration and the subsequent job duration. Restricting the sample to job seekers who changed search behaviors in the final 59 days before expiration of unemployment insurance, we secondly show an even greater negative effect of unemployment duration on the following job duration. The importance lies not only in the duration of unemployment. If job seekers keep a high reservation wage and a low search intensity because of the benefits of unemployment insurance, and change them in response to the expiration of insurance, prolonged unemployment will result in short job duration after unemployment
Duality Cascades and Parallelotopes
Duality cascades are a series of duality transformations in field theories,
which can be realized as the Hanany-Witten transitions in brane configurations
on a circle. In the setup of the ABJM theory and its generalizations, from the
physical requirement that duality cascades always end and the final destination
depends only on the initial brane configuration, we propose that the
fundamental domain of supersymmetric brane configurations in duality cascades
can tile the whole parameter space of relative ranks by translations, hence is
a parallelotope. We provide our arguments for the proposal.Comment: 37 pages, 9 eps figures; v2: section 2.2 added, four figures adde
Highly asymmetric probability distribution from a finite-width upward step during inflation
We study a single-field inflation model in which the inflaton potential has
an upward step between two slow-roll regimes by taking into account the finite
width of the step. We calculate the probability distribution function (PDF) of
the curvature perturbation using the formalism. The
PDF has an exponential-tail only for positive whose slope depends
on the step width. We find that the tail may have a significant impact on the
estimation of the primordial black hole abundance. We also show that the PDF
becomes highly asymmetric on a particular scale exiting the
horizon before the step, at which the curvature power spectrum has a dip. This
asymmetric PDF may leave an interesting signature in the large scale structure
such as voids.Comment: 19 pages, 7 figure
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