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doi: 10.2139/ssrn.1850790
handle: 10419/56696
This paper examines pecuniary aspects of work during unusual hours based on the German Time Use Data for 2001/02. The findings show positive wage premia of 9-10 percent for shift workers and men who work during unusual hours. There is some evidence of negative selection which suggests that men with lower potential daytime earnings have a higher propensity to choose these jobs because of the associated wage premium. The findings further show a U-shaped impact of temporal work disamenity across the wage distribution with higher wage premia paid to the extreme 5-percentiles.
compensating wage differentials, Lohnstruktur, quantile regression, J22, wage premia, non-standard working hours, Zeitverwendung, Non-Standard Working Hours, Time Allocation, J31, Shift Work, Non-Standard Working Hours, Time Allocation, Compensating Wage Differentials, Wage Premia, Quantile Regression, Deutschland, ddc:330, 330 Wirtschaft, J33, time allocation, Schichtarbeit, Compensating Wage Differentials, Wage Premia, shift work, Shift Work, Quantile Regression, J81, jel: jel:J81, jel: jel:J22, jel: jel:J31, jel: jel:J33
compensating wage differentials, Lohnstruktur, quantile regression, J22, wage premia, non-standard working hours, Zeitverwendung, Non-Standard Working Hours, Time Allocation, J31, Shift Work, Non-Standard Working Hours, Time Allocation, Compensating Wage Differentials, Wage Premia, Quantile Regression, Deutschland, ddc:330, 330 Wirtschaft, J33, time allocation, Schichtarbeit, Compensating Wage Differentials, Wage Premia, shift work, Shift Work, Quantile Regression, J81, jel: jel:J81, jel: jel:J22, jel: jel:J31, jel: jel:J33
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