Research Report Consequences of Long-Term Unemployment
Austin Nichols, Josh Mitchell, Stephan Lindner
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Being out of work for six months or more is associated with lower well-being among the long-term unemployed, their families, and their communities. Each week out of work means more lost income. The long-term unemployed also tend to earn less once they find new jobs. They tend to be in poorer health and have children with worse academic performance than similar workers who avoided unemployment. The extent to which those differences are due to the duration of joblessness as opposed to job loss itself or differences in the characteristics between the long-term unemployed and other workers is less clear.
Research Areas Wealth and financial well-being Families
Tags Economic well-being Wages and nonwage compensation
Policy Centers Income and Benefits Policy Center