Lecture Structural Change in Labor Supply and Cross-Country Differences in Hours Worked Economics Lecture Add to calendar 2021-11-18 11:00 2021-11-18 12:15 Europe/Rome Structural Change in Labor Supply and Cross-Country Differences in Hours Worked Via Zoom YYYY-MM-DD Print Share: Share on Facebook Share on BlueSky Share on X Share on LinkedIn Send by email Scheduled dates Nov 18 2021 11:00 - 12:15 CET Via Zoom Organised by Department of Economics A paper presentation by Nicola Fuchs-Schündeln, Goethe University Frankfurt and CEPR. This paper studies how structural change in labour supply along the development spectrum shapes cross-country differences in hours worked. We emphasize two main forces: sectoral reallocation from self-employment to wage work, and declining fixed costs of wage work. We show that these forces are crucial for understanding how the extensive margin (the employment rate) and intensive margin (hours per worker) of aggregate hours worked vary with income per capita. To do so we build and estimate a quantitative model of labour supply featuring a traditional self-employment sector and a modern wage-employment sector. When estimated to match cross-country data, the model predicts that sectoral reallocation explains more than half of the total hours decrease at lower levels of development. Declining fixed costs drive the rise in employment rates at higher levels of income per capita, and imply higher hours in the future, in contrast to the lower hours resulting from income effects and expansions in tax-and-transfer systems. Authors: Alexander Bick, Arizona State University, Nicola Fuchs-Schundeln, Goethe University Frankfurt and CEPR, David Lagakos, Boston University, CEPR and NBER, Hitoshi Tsujiyama, Goethe University Frankfurt. Partners