
doi: 10.2139/ssrn.1631136
handle: 10419/36857
We analyze the impact of imperfect contract enforcement on the emergence of unemployment. In an experimental labor market where trading parties can form long-term employment relationships, we compare a work environment where effort is observable, but not verifiable to a situation where explicit contracts are feasible. Our main result shows that unemployment is much higher when third-party contract enforcement is absent. Unemployment is involuntary, being caused by firms' employment and contracting policy. Moreover, we show that implicit contracting can lead to a segmentation of the labor market. Firms in both segments earn similar profits, but workers in the secondary sector face much less favorable conditions than their counterparts in primary-sector jobs.
M55, unemployment, Test, ddc:330, dual labor markets, Implizite Kontrakte, fairness, Arbeitsvertrag, incentives, implicit contracts, unemployment, fairness, dual labor markets, Arbeitsbedingungen, implicit contracts, Dualer Arbeitsmarkt, Gerechtigkeit, Incentives, C92, Leistungsanreiz, J64, Theorie der Arbeitslosigkeit, jel: jel:C92, jel: jel:J64, jel: jel:M55
M55, unemployment, Test, ddc:330, dual labor markets, Implizite Kontrakte, fairness, Arbeitsvertrag, incentives, implicit contracts, unemployment, fairness, dual labor markets, Arbeitsbedingungen, implicit contracts, Dualer Arbeitsmarkt, Gerechtigkeit, Incentives, C92, Leistungsanreiz, J64, Theorie der Arbeitslosigkeit, jel: jel:C92, jel: jel:J64, jel: jel:M55
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