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Essays in Empirical Labor Economics

Hofmarcher, Thomas LU (2019) In Lund Economic Studies
Abstract
This thesis contributes to empirical research in labor economics. It consists of three self-contained papers.

The first paper, The Effect of Paid Vacation on Health: Evidence from Sweden, analyzes the causal effect of paid vacation on health. Using register data on the universe of central government employees in Sweden, I exploit an age-based rule stipulated in the collective agreement covering these employees. The results indicate that no statistically significant changes in health are induced by an increase of three paid vacation days at age 30 and four days at age 40. These findings challenge the anecdotal view of additional paid vacation days as an adequate means to improve workers' health.

The second paper, The... (More)
This thesis contributes to empirical research in labor economics. It consists of three self-contained papers.

The first paper, The Effect of Paid Vacation on Health: Evidence from Sweden, analyzes the causal effect of paid vacation on health. Using register data on the universe of central government employees in Sweden, I exploit an age-based rule stipulated in the collective agreement covering these employees. The results indicate that no statistically significant changes in health are induced by an increase of three paid vacation days at age 30 and four days at age 40. These findings challenge the anecdotal view of additional paid vacation days as an adequate means to improve workers' health.

The second paper, The Effect of Education on Poverty: A European Perspective, studies the causal relationship between education and poverty. I construct a novel database comprising compulsory schooling reforms in 32 European countries and use them as instruments for education. I find economically large poverty-reducing effects of education among people aged 30 to 80. This holds true for both objective and subjective measures of poverty. An additional year of education thus reduces not only the likelihood of being classified as poor but also the likelihood of feeling poor.

The third paper, Is There Less Household Specialization in Gay and Lesbian Couples?, examines intra-couple differences in earnings potential as a source of specialization in same-sex and different-sex couples. We find that spouses with a higher earnings potential spend significantly more time on market work and less time on household work than spouses with a lower earnings potential. We observe this pattern in gay, lesbian, and different-sex couples. The effect of intra-couple differences in earnings potential on household specialization does mostly not differ statistically in gay and lesbian couples relative to different-sex couples. (Less)
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author
supervisor
opponent
  • Associate Professor Bütikofer, Aline, Norwegian School of Economics
organization
publishing date
type
Thesis
publication status
published
subject
keywords
health, vacation, holiday, working time, poverty, education, compulsory schooling, social exclusion, household specialization, sexual orientation, same-sex couples
in
Lund Economic Studies
pages
221 pages
publisher
Department of Economics, Lund University
defense location
Holger Crafoord Centre EC3:210
defense date
2019-04-26 13:15:00
ISSN
0460-0029
ISBN
978-91-7895-059-1
978-91-7895-058-4
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
eaf36a27-3aaf-4afc-b87c-55c56bbe89cc
date added to LUP
2019-04-01 12:19:03
date last changed
2020-12-04 11:11:31
@phdthesis{eaf36a27-3aaf-4afc-b87c-55c56bbe89cc,
  abstract     = {{This thesis contributes to empirical research in labor economics. It consists of three self-contained papers.<br/><br/>The first paper, The Effect of Paid Vacation on Health: Evidence from Sweden, analyzes the causal effect of paid vacation on health. Using register data on the universe of central government employees in Sweden, I exploit an age-based rule stipulated in the collective agreement covering these employees. The results indicate that no statistically significant changes in health are induced by an increase of three paid vacation days at age 30 and four days at age 40. These findings challenge the anecdotal view of additional paid vacation days as an adequate means to improve workers' health.<br/><br/>The second paper, The Effect of Education on Poverty: A European Perspective, studies the causal relationship between education and poverty. I construct a novel database comprising compulsory schooling reforms in 32 European countries and use them as instruments for education. I find economically large poverty-reducing effects of education among people aged 30 to 80. This holds true for both objective and subjective measures of poverty. An additional year of education thus reduces not only the likelihood of being classified as poor but also the likelihood of feeling poor.<br/><br/>The third paper, Is There Less Household Specialization in Gay and Lesbian Couples?, examines intra-couple differences in earnings potential as a source of specialization in same-sex and different-sex couples. We find that spouses with a higher earnings potential spend significantly more time on market work and less time on household work than spouses with a lower earnings potential. We observe this pattern in gay, lesbian, and different-sex couples. The effect of intra-couple differences in earnings potential on household specialization does mostly not differ statistically in gay and lesbian couples relative to different-sex couples.}},
  author       = {{Hofmarcher, Thomas}},
  isbn         = {{978-91-7895-059-1}},
  issn         = {{0460-0029}},
  keywords     = {{health; vacation; holiday; working time; poverty; education; compulsory schooling; social exclusion; household specialization; sexual orientation; same-sex couples}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  month        = {{04}},
  publisher    = {{Department of Economics, Lund University}},
  school       = {{Lund University}},
  series       = {{Lund Economic Studies}},
  title        = {{Essays in Empirical Labor Economics}},
  year         = {{2019}},
}