The job search theory, as developed since the early 1960s, is primarily a theory predicting the behaviour of unemployed job‐seekers responding to the costs of acquiring information about the wage possibilities available to them. However, implications can be derived for the influence on the individual's labour force participation (LFP) decision of the factors used in search theory, and these implications have never been tested. This paper will present a number of hypotheses regarding LFP and then test these hypotheses against a broad and diverse cross‐section sample of male heads of households, using ordinary least squares regression analysis. The results generally confirm the hypotheses and the view that the variables of the job search theory have a significant influence on the LFP decision.
Article navigation
1 January 1978
Review Article|
January 01 1978
LABOUR FORCE PARTICIPATION AND THE JOB SEARCH THEORY: TESTS OF SOME NEGLECTED IMPLICATIONS Available to Purchase
ROBERT M. FEINBERG
ROBERT M. FEINBERG
Pennsylvania State University
Search for other works by this author on:
Publisher: Emerald Publishing
Online ISSN: 1758-7387
Print ISSN: 0144-3585
© MCB UP Limited
1978
Journal of Economic Studies (1978) 5 (1): 50–63.
Citation
FEINBERG RM (1978), "LABOUR FORCE PARTICIPATION AND THE JOB SEARCH THEORY: TESTS OF SOME NEGLECTED IMPLICATIONS". Journal of Economic Studies, Vol. 5 No. 1 pp. 50–63, doi: https://doi.org/10.1108/eb008073
Download citation file:
305
Views
Suggested Reading
Unemployment invariance hypothesis, added and discouraged worker effects in Canada
International Journal of Manpower (October,2018)
Does access to assistive technologies enhance labour force participation amongst the disabled population? Evidence from India
International Journal of Manpower (January,2024)
Labor force participation in Eastern European countries: nonlinear modeling
Journal of Economic Studies (October,2019)
Mapping gender wage gaps in regular employment: a counterfactual decomposition analysis for India
International Journal of Manpower (March,2025)
Related Chapters
Gender Disparity in the Informal Sector Employment in India
Informal Economy and Sustainable Development Goals: Ideas, Interventions and Challenges
NEW EVIDENCE ON CULTURE AND THE GENDER WAGE GAP: A COMPARISON ACROSS ETHNIC ORIGIN GROUPS
Worker Well-Being and Public Policy
The Calculation and Use of Retirement Age Statistics: A Recap Since 1970
Developments in Litigation Economics
Recommended for you
These recommendations are informed by your reading behaviors and indicated interests.
