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The Intergenerational Effects of Worker Displacement
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Abstract
This paper uses variation induced by firm closures to explore the
intergenerational effects of worker displacement. Using a Canadian panel of
administrative data that follows almost 60,000 father-child pairs from 1978 to 1999 and
includes detailed information about the firms at which the father worked, we construct
narrow treatment and control groups whose fathers had the same level of permanent
income prior to 1982 when some of the fathers were displaced. We demonstrate that job
loss leads to large permanent reductions in family income and small increases in mobility
and divorce. Comparing outcomes among individuals whose fathers experienced an
employment shock to outcomes among individuals whose fathers did not, we find that
children whose fathers were displaced have annual earnings about 9% lower than similar
children whose fathers did not experience an employment shock. They are also more
likely to receive unemployment insurance and social assistance. The estimates are driven
by the experiences of children whose family income was at the bottom of the income
distribution, and are robust to a number of specification checks.
This work was completed while Oreopoulos was a Statistics Canada Research Fellow and member of the
Family and Labour Studies Division of Statistics Canada. The financial support of the National Science
Foundation is gratefully acknowledged. We also wish to thank Miles Corak, and seminar participants at
Brown University, MIT, Princeton University, Stanford University, Yale University, the University of
California Berkeley, UCLA, the University of Toronto and the NBER summer institute for their helpful
comments.worker displacement