Skip to Content
Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago
  • About Us
  • Contact Us
  • Newsroom
  • Museum
  • Careers
  • Banking
  • Research
  • Markets
  • Publications
    • Periodicals
    • Data Releases
    • Speeches
  • Events
  • Education
  • People
  • Region
How Do Sudden Large Losses in Wealth Affect Labor Force Participation?
  • Share
  • Print
    • Text Size
    • Smaller
    • Larger
cover
On This Page
January 2011, No. 282
  • Download Entire Publication
Last Updated: 12/01/2010

How Do Sudden Large Losses in Wealth Affect Labor Force Participation?

David Benson, Eric French

The authors assess whether the sudden large losses in household wealth due to recent declines in stock and home values have significantly affected the U.S. labor market. They find that the overall labor force participation rate would be 0.7 percentage points lower were it not for the declines in the values of stocks and houses over the 2006–10 period.

Subscribe Now

Register to receive email alerts when new issues are published.

Subscribe
More by this Author

David Benson

  • Macroeconomic Policy and Labor Markets: Lessons from Dale Mortensen’s Research (Special Issue)
  • Consumption and the Great Recession

Eric French

  • Public Pensions and Labor Supply Over the Life Cycle
Related Topics
  • Insurance and Wealth Building among Lower-income Households
  • On the cyclical behavior of employment, unemployment and labor force participation
  • The Agreement on Subsidies and Countervailing Measures: Tying One’s Hand through the WTO.
  • Measuring labor market turbulence
View All

Follow Us:

FaceBook RSS Twitter YouTube
  • About Us
  • Contact Us
  • Newsroom
  • Subscribe
  • Tours
  • Careers
Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago, 230 South LaSalle Street, Chicago, Illinois 60604-1413, USA. Tel. (312) 322-5322
Copyright © 2012. All rights reserved. Please review our
  • Privacy Policy
  • Legal Notices