Abstract

The study has two interrelated objectives. The first one is to explore the role of expected wage gains for mobility decisions, the second to investigate the effects of mobility on subsequent earnings. The econometric analysis takes the interdependence between wages and mobility into account; wages are affected by mobility and mobility decisions respond to alternative prospective wages. The results show, among other things, that job movers in Sweden received an increase in real wage growth rates per year of 4 percent compared to a situation where they had not moved during the period 1968–1974. We also find some evidence that self-selection in the labor market is efficiency improving; the excess wage growth from job changing is higher for movers than for measurably similar stayers.

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