We found a match
Your institution may have access to this item. Find your institution then sign in to continue.
- Title
Work-sharing During the Great Depression: Did the 'President's Reemployment Agreement' Promote Reemployment?
- Authors
TAYLOR, JASON E.
- Abstract
The President's Reemployment Agreement (PRA) of 1933 directed firms to reduce workweeks during the Great Depression so existing jobs could be spread into additional employment opportunities. Similar 'work-sharing' policies have recently been implemented across Europe in hopes of reducing unemployment. I find that, ceteris paribus, the work-sharing aspects of the PRA created nearly 2.5 million new employment opportunities in around four months. However, the programme also required firms to raise hourly wage rates, offsetting close to half of these gains. Furthermore, most of the remaining employment gains were wiped out after cartel-oriented industry-specific codes of fair competition supplanted the PRA.
- Subjects
EMPLOYMENT reentry; GREAT Depression, 1929-1939; WORK sharing; JOB sharing; WORKWEEK; JOB vacancies; ECONOMIC opportunities; WAGES; CARTELS; ECONOMIC competition
- Publication
Economica, 2011, Vol 78, Issue 309, p133
- ISSN
0013-0427
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1111/j.1468-0335.2009.00804.x