HARVARD ECONOMIC STUDIES
Cover: Employment Hazards: An Investigation of Market Performance, from Harvard University PressCover: Employment Hazards in HARDCOVER

Harvard Economic Studies 148

Employment Hazards

An Investigation of Market Performance

Product Details

HARDCOVER

$42.00 • £36.95 • €38.95

ISBN 9780674251762

Publication Date: 02/14/1980

Short

352 pages

6-1/8 x 9-1/4 inches

illustrations

Harvard Economic Studies

World

Add to Cart

Media Requests:

Related Subjects

The safety of the work place is now a highly visible public issue. Many are calling for tighter regulation to reduce worker risk, while others feel government intervention is ineffective and costly. Here Kip Viscusi explores how well markets for hazardous jobs actually work. According to classical economics, other things being equal, a worker will demand more pay for a hazardous job than a safe one. However, this assumes that job related hazards are known, when often they are not. Using recent advances in the economics of information, Viscusi develops a theory of individual responses to job hazards under conditions of uncertainty.

His assumptions are that hazards are uncertain events and that learning about them is a process that takes place over time. He then employs this analysis to study the performance of job markets in matching persons and jobs and in compensating persons for exposure to hazards. Finally he tests his adaptive model of the decision to quit and finds substantial evidence that risks are indeed reflected in wage differentials and quit behavior.

Recent News

Black lives matter. Black voices matter. A statement from HUP »

From Our Blog

The Burnout Challenge

On Burnout Today with Christina Maslach and Michael P. Leiter

In The Burnout Challenge, leading researchers of burnout Christina Maslach and Michael P. Leiter focus on what occurs when the conditions and requirements set by a workplace are out of sync with the needs of people who work there. These “mismatches,” ranging from work overload to value conflicts, cause both workers and workplaces to suffer