The Response of Voluntary and Involuntary Female Part-Time Workers to Changes in Labor-Market Conditions

Bank of Israel Discussion Paper No. 2008.08

35 Pages Posted: 9 Sep 2008

See all articles by Adi Brender

Adi Brender

Bank of Israel - Research Department

Lior Gallo

Bank of Israel - Research Department

Date Written: September 7, 2008

Abstract

Micro studies in the US find that part-time employees who prefer to work full-time (involuntary part-timers) are more likely to move to full-time employment than those who work part-time voluntarily. These findings are taken as evidence that the subjective classification of involuntary part-timers has a behavioral content. In contrast, the tendency of Israeli involuntary part-timers to move to full-time jobs is similar to that of voluntary ones. Nevertheless, we argue that the raw rate of transition is not a conclusive test and suggest an alternative one: observing the differences in the response of voluntary and involuntary part-timers to changes in labor demand. Using the repeated interviews in Israeli Labor Force Surveys, we create a dataset that covers the period 1991-2004 and find that GDP growth and changes in labor demand increase the probability that involuntary part-timers will move to full-time jobs, but have no effect on voluntary part-timers. Therefore, despite the virtually identical raw transition rates of voluntary and involuntary part-timers, this subjective classification appears to have a significant behavioral content.

Keywords: Female employment, part-time, voluntary, involuntary, subjective data

JEL Classification: E24, J16, J22, J64

Suggested Citation

Brender, Adi and Gallo, Lior, The Response of Voluntary and Involuntary Female Part-Time Workers to Changes in Labor-Market Conditions (September 7, 2008). Bank of Israel Discussion Paper No. 2008.08, Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=1264582 or http://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.1264582

Adi Brender (Contact Author)

Bank of Israel - Research Department ( email )

PO Box 780
Jerusalem 91007
Israel
+972 2 655 2618 (Phone)
+972 2 655 2657 (Fax)

Lior Gallo

Bank of Israel - Research Department ( email )

PO Box 780
Jerusalem 91007
Israel

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