Country-Specific Preferences and Employment Rates in Europe

Working Paper: NBER ID: w21561

Authors: Simone Moriconi; Giovanni Peri

Abstract: European countries exhibit significant differences in employment rates of adult males. Differences in labor-leisure preferences, partly determined by cultural values that vary across countries, can be responsible for part of these differences. However, differences in labor market institutions, productivity, and skills of the labor force are also crucial factors and likely correlated with preferences. In this paper we use variation among first- and second-generation cross-country European migrants to isolate the effect of culturally transmitted labor-leisure preferences on individual employment rates. If migrants maintain some of their country of origin labor-leisure preferences as they move to different labor market conditions, we can separate the impact of preferences from the effect of other factors. We find country-specific labor-leisure preferences explain about 24% of the top-bottom variation in employment rates across European countries.

Keywords: Labor Economics; Cultural Preferences; Employment Rates; Migration

JEL Codes: J22; J61; Z10


Causal Claims Network Graph

Edges that are evidenced by causal inference methods are in orange, and the rest are in light blue.


Causal Claims

CauseEffect
culturally transmitted labor-leisure preferences (J29)employment rates (J68)
country-specific labor-leisure preferences (J29)variation in employment rates across European countries (J69)
culturally transmitted labor-leisure preferences (J29)employment outcomes for migrants (J68)
culturally transmitted labor-leisure preferences (J29)differences in employment rates between countries (F66)

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