Job displacement, remarriage and marital sorting
We investigate how job displacement affects whom men marry and study implications for marriage market matching theory. Leveraging quasi-experimental variation from Danish establishment closures, we show that job displacement leads men to break up if matched with low-earning women and to re-match with higher earning women. We use a general search and matching model of the marriage market to derive several implications of our empirical findings: (i) husbands' and wives' incomes are substitutes rather than complements in the marriage market; (ii) our findings are hard to reconcile with one-dimensional matching, but are consistent with multidimensional matching; (iii) a substantial part of the cross-sectional correlation between spouses' incomes arises spuriously from sorting on unobserved characteristics. We highlight the relevance of our results by simulating how the effect of rising individual-level inequality on between-household inequality is shaped by marital sorting.
| Item Type | Working paper |
|---|---|
| Keywords | marriage market,sorting,search and matching,multidimensional heterogeneity |
| Departments | Centre for Economic Performance |
| Date Deposited | 06 Feb 2025 15:57 |
| URI | https://researchonline.lse.ac.uk/id/eprint/126803 |
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