Workers in less secure jobs are often paid less than identical-looking workers in more secure
jobs. We show that this lack of compensating differentials for unemployment risk can arise in
equilibrium when all workers are identical, and firms differ, but do so only in offered job security
(the probability that the worker is not sent into unemployment). In a setting where workers search
on and off the job, wages paid increase with job security for at least all firms in the risky tail of the
distribution of firm-level unemployment risk. As a result, unemployment spells become persistent
for low-wage and unemployed workers, a seeming pattern of ‘unemployment scarring’, that is
created entirely by firm heterogeneity alone. Higher in the wage distribution, workers can take
wage cuts to move to more stable employment