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How to distinguish voluntary from involuntary unemployment: on the relationship between the willingness to work and unemployment-induced unhappiness

How to distinguish voluntary from involuntary unemployment: on the relationship between the willingness to work and unemployment-induced unhappiness
How to distinguish voluntary from involuntary unemployment: on the relationship between the willingness to work and unemployment-induced unhappiness

SUMMARY: Studies investigating the determinants of happiness show that unemployment causes high distress for most affected persons. Researchers conclude that the amount of this disutility demonstrates the involuntariness of unemployment. This paper applies the happiness research approach to German panel data in order to revive the underlying economic question of whether unemployment is voluntary or involuntary. Accordingly, the decline in life satisfaction associated with unemployment is related to the willingness to work. The results of the econometric investigation indicate a very strong connection between unemployment-induced disutility and willingness to work, so that it is possible to divide unemployed individuals into certain categories, according to the potential voluntariness of unemployment. While there is a minority which can truly be regarded as voluntarily unemployed, most unemployed people actively search for work and suffer far more from unemployment than indicated by previous happiness research studies. A subsequent discussion includes a critical juxtaposition of the findings with policies such as the recent German labour market reforms.

0023-5962
317-329
Chadi, Adrian
9b86c34e-9340-465f-a4c0-492202a0958a
Chadi, Adrian
9b86c34e-9340-465f-a4c0-492202a0958a

Chadi, Adrian (2010) How to distinguish voluntary from involuntary unemployment: on the relationship between the willingness to work and unemployment-induced unhappiness. Kyklos, 63 (3), 317-329. (doi:10.1111/j.1467-6435.2010.00476.x).

Record type: Article

Abstract

SUMMARY: Studies investigating the determinants of happiness show that unemployment causes high distress for most affected persons. Researchers conclude that the amount of this disutility demonstrates the involuntariness of unemployment. This paper applies the happiness research approach to German panel data in order to revive the underlying economic question of whether unemployment is voluntary or involuntary. Accordingly, the decline in life satisfaction associated with unemployment is related to the willingness to work. The results of the econometric investigation indicate a very strong connection between unemployment-induced disutility and willingness to work, so that it is possible to divide unemployed individuals into certain categories, according to the potential voluntariness of unemployment. While there is a minority which can truly be regarded as voluntarily unemployed, most unemployed people actively search for work and suffer far more from unemployment than indicated by previous happiness research studies. A subsequent discussion includes a critical juxtaposition of the findings with policies such as the recent German labour market reforms.

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Published date: 1 August 2010

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 496174
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/496174
ISSN: 0023-5962
PURE UUID: db2e094f-cad7-41b1-b067-c18e5a671627
ORCID for Adrian Chadi: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-2008-0653

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Date deposited: 05 Dec 2024 17:59
Last modified: 07 Dec 2024 03:16

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Author: Adrian Chadi ORCID iD

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